Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Champagne says he's working phones to court new players for Canadian grocery market

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jan, 2024 01:43 PM
  • Champagne says he's working phones to court new players for Canadian grocery market

Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne is once again insisting that he is reaching out to international grocers in the hopes they will open up shop in Canada and spur more competition.

Champagne said Tuesday that he'd spoken to one foreign grocer that very morning as part of his efforts to court new players for the Canadian grocery sector  — but he's not naming any names. 

"I can't tell you too much, or else you won't ask me questions next week," he said in French in advance of the weekly cabinet meeting. 

"I spoke with one company this morning."

As food inflation rages on, Champagne has repeatedly teased in recent months the conversations he says he's been having with foreign grocers.

Canada needs more competition for grocery dollars, and having more players in the market would help put downward pressure on prices, he said. 

"Am I going to succeed? I don't know. But certainly, it's worth trying." 

The focus on attracting international grocers comes after Champagne's largely futile attempt to push Canadian grocers to help bring grocery prices under control. 

He met with Canadian grocers in the fall and demanded they create plans to stabilize grocery prices or face consequences including potential tax measures.

But beyond expressing disappointment that the grocers have not been more transparent, Champagne has stayed mum on whether the federal government plans to punish them for it. 

"Large grocers have not, to date, been sufficiently transparent about the causes of food inflation and they have failed, for the most part, to provide regular updates on initiatives aimed at stabilizing food prices in the country," he wrote in a letter Monday to Matthew Boswell, Canada's competition commissioner.

"The continued record profits in the grocery retail sector indicate that there are more opportunities to bring relief for Canadian consumers."

Metro Inc. reported a first-quarter profit of $228.5 million on Tuesday, with sales up by 6.5 per cent. In a virtual press conference, CEO Eric La Flèche said retail price increases will start coming to grocery stores as soon as next week, as an industry-wide blackout period on supplier price increases comes to an end. 

La Flèche has said Metro did not alter its prices in response to the meeting with Champagne.

Champagne's letter to Boswell suggested a follow-up study on the grocery sector, now that the bureau has new powers to subpoena companies for information. 

"I was disappointed to learn that the bureau's study did not benefit from the full co-operation of large grocers," the letter said.

"I also look forward to discussing your assessment on the potential scope and feasibility of a follow-up grocery market study."

Metro fully co-operated with the previous study, La Flèche insisted Tuesday. 

The Competition Bureau published the findings of its study in June, saying that the co-operation of grocers was  inconsistent and less than comprehensive. 

The report found that concentration in the grocery industry has increased in recent years, and the largest grocers have increased their profits from food sales. 

The bureau also said Canada’s grocery sector needs more competition to help keep food prices down, give shoppers more choice and encourage new entrants.

The Liberal government recently made several changes to the country's competition law, which included giving the bureau the power to compel information from companies for a market study.

The changes also empower the bureau to go after anti-competitive collaborations between businesses, even if they are not competitors. 

Champagne says this will help boost competition in the grocery sector, given it will allow the bureau to challenge leasing agreements that bar a competitor from opening up shop nearby. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Spike in Vancouver property tax in 2024

Spike in Vancouver property tax in 2024
Vancouver business owners and residents will face a property-tax increase in 2024, but it’s smaller than last year’s double-digit spike. Vancouver's city council has approved a 7.5-per-cent property-tax increase in 2024.

Spike in Vancouver property tax in 2024

BC facing snowfall warnings

BC facing snowfall warnings
BC is facing a number of weather warnings related to heavy snowfall and wintry conditions. Environment Canada has issued snowfall warnings in Whistler, the North Thompson region and Highway 1 from Sicamous to Golden, with accumulations of up to 20-centimetres expected in some areas.

BC facing snowfall warnings

Revealing allegations on Nijjar death meant to 'put a chill' on India, Trudeau says

Revealing allegations on Nijjar death meant to 'put a chill' on India, Trudeau says
The allegations worsened already strained relations between the Liberal government and that of India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, which has continued to deny any connection to the killing. In the interview, Trudeau said his public statement came after weeks of "quiet diplomacy" that included raising the allegations with India at the highest levels.

Revealing allegations on Nijjar death meant to 'put a chill' on India, Trudeau says

Liberal caucus meets after Canada votes for Israel-Hamas ceasefire at United Nations

Liberal caucus meets after Canada votes for Israel-Hamas ceasefire at United Nations
Liberal MPs gathered Wednesday for what was expected to be their final caucus meeting of the year, a day after Canada shifted its stance to join international calls for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. The decision came amid conflict within Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal caucus over how to respond to the latest eruption in violence, which was triggered when Hamas militants launched their brazen Oct. 7 attack on Israel.   

Liberal caucus meets after Canada votes for Israel-Hamas ceasefire at United Nations

Truck driver gets 15 years in prison, flees to India

Truck driver gets 15 years in prison, flees to India
Police are seeking an Interpol Red Notice on a Surrey truck driver sentenced to serve 15 years in jail for cocaine smuggling who escaped to India last year. B-C R-C-M-P say a Canada-wide warrant has also been issued for Raj Kumar Mehmi, who was sentenced in absentia in November for smuggling 80 kilograms of cocaine across the Pacific Highway crossing from the U-S.

Truck driver gets 15 years in prison, flees to India

Surrey shooting lands 1 in hospital

Surrey shooting lands 1 in hospital
Police in Surrey are investigating a shooting early this morning that has sent one man to hospital. Surrey Mounties say they received a report of shots fired at a vehicle just before 2 a-m at the intersection of 64th Avenue and 124th Street.

Surrey shooting lands 1 in hospital