You will undoubtedly have noticed the rapidly rising price of food on your recent grocery shop. According to the聽, food prices have risen by about 8% this year, higher than the average inflation rate.
罢丑别听聽that prices of fruit rose by 10鈥40%, frozen vegetables by 18%, canned products by 12% and dairy products by up to 20%.
聽found that food prices had gone up 鈥渁cross the board鈥.
This price surge, accompanied by the soaring cost of petrol, household bills and rents, has left millions of people struggling to get by.
础听聽found that 72% of respondents are buying less because of price hikes. More people are聽聽and avoiding more 鈥渆xpensive鈥 foods, such as dairy and meat.
Unsurprisingly, some have turned to shoplifting to put food on the table. According to聽聽shoplifting has increased by 38% over the past two years.
The major retailers have responded by investing in high-tech anti-shoplifting technology, including installing聽聽that use artificial intelligence to check what customers are scanning.
Coles chief executive officer Leah Weckert complained that聽.
But while many struggle to put food on the table, Coles and fellow supermarket giant Woolworths have reported mega profits.
Coles announced a 4.8% rise in profits in the 2022鈥23 financial year, up to $1.09 billion, and Woolworths reported a 4.6% rise to $1.6 billion.
This continues the duopoly鈥檚 skyrocketing profits that began during the pandemic when Woolworths reported a rise of 78% to $2.1 billion.
The supermarket giants are using 鈥渋nflation鈥 as an excuse to massively ramp up prices, thereby boosting their profits.
Both corporations cite the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the COVID-19 pandemic and supply chain issues as reasons for their price gouging.
But research by The Australia Institute, in July last year, found that corporate profiteering is a聽.
鈥淭he national accounts show it is rising profits, not rising costs, that are driving Australia鈥檚 inflation,鈥澛.
鈥淲hile companies are arguing that they have 鈥榥o choice鈥 but to increase their prices, the fact that they are making record and rising profits is proof of how many choices they really have.鈥
While Coles and Woolworths are not the only corporations profiteering from the cost-of-living crisis 鈥斅燪antas,聽the聽Commonwealth聽Bank聽of聽Australia聽and聽energy聽company聽AGL聽are聽辞迟丑别谤听别虫补尘辫濒别蝉聽鈥斅爐heir monopolistic power and governments鈥 refusal to control prices, even of essential items like food, allows them to get away with this.
In the 2022 financial year, Woolworths controlled 37.1% of 聽聽compared to Coles鈥 27.9% share. ALDI controlled 9.5% and IGA held 6.9%. The rest went to independent retailers.
The Coles-Woolworths duopoly controlled 65% of the market, with an even bigger market share in some small towns and regional centres. Coles and Woolworths can get away with bumping up prices because many people have little choice but to shop at these price-gouging mega grocers.
These companies could spare us their cries about聽聽while they commit daylight robbery.
Corporate profiteering and price gouging are the cause of the cost-of-living crisis, which, in addition to the housing crisis, is also affecting those without employment.
Deakin University researcher Dr Christina Zorbas聽聽that the federal government needs to step in to reduce food prices, and raise welfare payments to ensure that nobody has to skip meals.
Profiteering is not illegal and, under capitalism, it鈥檚 even encouraged. When working people have to skip meals to pay the rent in a rich country, this is the definition of a sick system.
91自拍论坛聽has been campaigning against such injustice for more than 30 years. If you agree and want to join the fight for a world where no one goes hungry,聽产别肠辞尘别听补听蝉耻辫辫辞谤迟别谤听迟辞诲补测! It鈥檚 cheaper than a聽.