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  1. This is just fantasy stuff. Supermarkets are highly complex businesses to run with supply chain challenges unlike most other retail focused operations due to a large volume of ‘daily fresh’ consumables.

    Our benevolent public servants don’t understand the word competition let alone how to compete. The existing operations do – why have they been able to defend their duopoly so well?

    Food prices will go up. That’s supply and demand in action. Look at eggs ( another government win…)

    The best thing Labour could do is call Aldi and beg them to come here to NZ. They’ve driven prices down in Australia yet only hold roughly a 15% share of trade over there. They also forced Coles and Woolies to accept lower margin overall so instead of the 4% to 5% profit that Foodstuffs et al make here, the Australian grocers are seeing around 3% (it’s still many millions).

    In the UK where there are 6 large grocery chains, it’s even more competitive and prices accordingly are lower as compared to NZ.

    The modern state isn’t capable of actual delivery any more. It was when Toxic Men were in charge and things like diversity and inclusion hadn’t even been thought of. I don’t want to return to the 50’s though so a different approach is needed.

  2. A good idea. It could be both a wholesaler and retailer, fully state-owned, with a closed-shop union agreement.

    But there is no excuse for what happened in the grocery market.

    The chains owned by Coles, Franklins, I.G.A and Albert Gubay were all allowed to be gobbled up by the Woolworths’ Group. Ridiculous decision by the Anti-Trust regulators (or corrupt?)

    Andrew Lane over at TFH would be a potential competitor, but the monopoly is so bad he can’t get wholesale contracts to start a full-line grocery store, and is stuck with some of the Metro Convenience stores that Woolworths’ didn’t want.

    It will take a long time for the Costco stores to be rolled out. Woolworths’ Holdings South Africa packed up and left — even though they had the only non-discount national department store chain remaining — because apparently the economy is too weak (and wages too pathetic) to support something as basic as a David Jones department store!

    The Foodstuffs Co-Op should be broken up also — they have three chains that could easily be separate competitors.

  3. “When buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold are legislators.”

    P. J. O’Rourke

  4. Why the fuck can’t we get local grade meat and produce at local prices? Why must all farms produce export grade and make us pay export prices? It’s fucked up

  5. It’s not the everyday banquet that it was. Now Countdown (Woolworths Australia) is up for sale in Gisborne. When the rats leave you know the ship is sinking.
    https://www.bayleys.co.nz/news/commercial/countdown-on-for-sale-of-gisborne-property

    While we’re known as Countdown, we’re part of Woolworths New Zealand, a subsidiary of the publicly-listed Australian company, Woolworths Group Limited. Woolworths New Zealand is also the franchise coordinator for Fresh Choice and SuperValue.

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