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Retail Chains – Abuse of Buyer Power The Irish Experience William Prasifka Chairperson, The Competition Authority 11 November 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "Retail Chains – Abuse of Buyer Power The Irish Experience William Prasifka Chairperson, The Competition Authority 11 November 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Retail Chains – Abuse of Buyer Power The Irish Experience William Prasifka Chairperson, The Competition Authority 11 November 2009

2 Grocery Reports The Grocery Monitor Project  Report 1: The Structure and Operation of Grocery Retailing  Report 2: Price Trends  Report 3: Retail Planning System Retail-related Import and Distribution Study

3 The Problem Buyer Power  Retailers are moving supply to the UK  Unfair demands are squeezing suppliers Allegations of millions in hello money & slotting allowances Fear of consequences Delisting Job Losses “The forced payment of up to €160m in ‘Hello Money’ to large supermarket chains by Irish suppliers is jeopardising thousands of Irish agri-business jobs” Member, Irish Parliament

4 The Solution Proposal to introduce: Code of Practice in Ireland Grocery Ombudsman Based on the UK Model Key Objective : Protect Suppliers from Unfair Practices Hello Money & Slotting Allowances

5 Current Legislation The Competition (Amendment) Act 2006 prohibits  Imposing resale price maintenance  Apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions  Slotting allowances  Hello Money These prohibitions are subject to a competition test

6 Our Experience Competition (Amendment) Act 2006 never been used Few complaints Anecdotal fear of coming forward No private actions Will an Ombudsman change this?

7 UK Experience Different competitive dynamics EDLP v’s High/Low pricing  Shoppers travelling to Northern Ireland – not vice versa Has the UK Supermarket Code been effective?  Fear among suppliers  Failure to use the code to resolve disputes  Few cases mediated

8 Ombudsman v’s Act No Competition Test No new incentive to come forward Costly Has little power The Code will “do a lot of harm by trying to do a little good” ESRI

9 Buyer Power If this is the problem, what is the solution? Changing the rules - Regulation? Ombudsman? Will Result in: Those with buyer power changing behaviour Find alternative methods of “squeezing” Encourage trading with non-Irish suppliers

10 Buyer Power Only effective remedy is new entry But… Irish planning laws restrict entry Maximum retail floorspace caps Grocery Store: 3,000/3,500 m2 Discounters (ALDI/Lidl): 1,000/1,500 m2 Trade Diversion Test Process used strategically to frustrate competition

11 The IKEA Effect Attempts to enter Irish market  Planning issues - Restricted due to floorspace caps  2005 Caps lifted for non-food stores in certain areas  2006 IKEA Planning application  2007 Planning permission granted Finally opened 27 July 2009 And Then What Happened ?????????

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17 The IKEA Effect


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