UK government urged to act as some meat and veg
prices double in a year
Which? and other groups call for intervention as food
industry figures gather for summit with Rishi Sunak
Sarah
Butler
@whatbutlersaw
Tue 16 May
2023 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/may/16/uk-government-meat-veg-prices-which-rishi-sunak
Some meat
and vegetable lines at supermarkets have almost doubled in price over the past
year, research has found, prompting fresh calls for the government to intervene
as food industry figures gather for summit in Downing Street.
Annual
inflation on supermarket own-label budget items stepped up to 25% in April,
according to the data from consumer group Which?, while the rate of price
increases on branded goods remained steady at just under 14%.
However,
some individual items rose at a far faster pace. The price of a pack of Morliny
frankfurters at Asda shot up from an average of £1.25 to £2.42, an increase of
nearly 94% in a year, while a four-pack of brown onions at Morrisons went from
65p to £1.24 – a 91% rise.
The highest
rate of inflation by category last month was on cheese and milk – both over 20%
– while inflation eased slightly on both premium and regular supermarket
own-brand items.
Sue Davies,
the head of food policy at Which?, urged Rishi Sunak to ask grocery bosses
gathering at No 10 on Tuesday to commit to doing more to hold prices down,
“including stocking budget lines in convenience stores to ensure easy access to
basic, affordable food ranges that support a healthy diet”.
Supermarkets,
farmers and food industry leaders are meeting the prime minister to discuss how
to tackle food price inflation, which rose to 19% in March, according to
official government figures.
Before the
summit, agriculture and food lobby groups called for more access to overseas
workers to help pick crops and better regulation of suppliers’ relations with
supermarkets as well as help to adapt to cope with an anticipated rise in
extreme weather conditions prompted by climate change.
The UK’s
competition watchdog announced on Monday that it would look at whether a poorly
functioning market was contributing to food price inflation, alongside a
similar investigation into fuel prices.
Anna Taylor
of the sustainable food lobby group the Food Foundation called on the
government to reinstate its horticulture strategy, which was abandoned earlier
this month, in order to secure supplies of fresh fruit and vegetables from the
UK, as farmers both here and overseas face difficulties in growing crops in
increasingly volatile conditions.
She also
said the government should expand the Healthy Start voucher scheme, which
ensured that low-income households could afford fresh produce.
“Climate
shocks are going to be worsening as we go into the future, and we should be
expecting food price inflation to be normal state of affairs. We need to be
thinking seriously about how we cope with inflation better than we are now,”
Taylor said.
Vicki Hird,
head of farming at the Sustain alliance of farming, environmental and community
groups, said the government was “failing to support farmers properly” amid a
crisis in horticultural production caused by rising costs and lack of labour
availability.
She said
the government should extend the powers of the independent Grocery Code
Adjudicator so that rules such as no automatic delisting of suppliers’ products
could be legally enforced.
Fears about
the UK’s food supplies have increased after supermarkets were forced to ration
supplies of tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers in February owing to extreme
weather interrupting supplies of salad and vegetable crops from southern Spain
and north Africa.
UK supplies
of salad crops have also been restricted by a cold, grey spring and a rise in
the cost of energy that has prompted greenhouse growers to cut back on
production.
Despite
problems with supplies, the government ditched plans for a horticulture
strategy, one the few recommendations it had agreed to take forward from a
government-commissioned report by the founder of Leon restaurants, Henry
Dimbleby.
Fears have
arisen that large companies have used the cover of inflation to boost profits,
with those on lowest income suffering the most.
.webp)
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