on 06-06-2014 08:51 PM
Horticulture body AUSVEG is urgently calling on the ACCC to investigate the behaviour of Woolworths, who are allegedly seeking enormous contributions from Australia’s horticulturalists to pay for their Jamie Oliver campaign.
Woolworths are demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars from individual growers around Australia to fund their new campaign in the form of a massive new 40c per crate charge on top of the 2.5 – 5 per cent fee growers are already required to pay Woolworths for them to market and promote their produce.
Growers around the country are being given no undertaking from Woolworths on what return they will see from the additional funds they are being asked to provide to fund the promotion.
AUSVEG today held a press conference with Independent South Australian Senator Nick Xenophon, a long-time supporter of the Australian vegetable and potato industries, to expose Woolworths’ behaviour
AUSVEG is alarmed at the way that Woolworths is squeezing its suppliers for more cash and are outraged at the way that the company is behaving,” said AUSVEG Acting CEO, William Churchill.
According to AUSVEG, growers around the country are frightened that if they do not comply with these requests to fund the campaign their business with the country’s biggest supermarket will be blacklisted and they will start to receive fewer orders for produce, or be struck out altogether.
“It’s astounding for a company that posted a $1.32 billion net profit in February and employs 190,000 staff to be going back to already squeezed farmers and asking them to cough up more money to pay for promotions,” Churchill said.
“Australia’s farmers cannot afford to fund Woolworths’ marketing campaigns and expectations that growers should contribute more are totally unreasonable. The ACCC must immediately investigate” said Mr Churchill.
The news comes a month after the ACCC took Coles to Federal Court claiming the supermarket giant broke Consumer Law in conduct in relation to its Active Retail Collaboration (ACR) program.
The ACR program was developed by Coles in 2011 to improve earnings by obtaining better trading terms from its suppliers. It’s alleged one of the ways Coles sought to improve earnings was through the introduction of ongoing rebates to be paid by its suppliers in connection with the Coles ARC program, based on purported benefits to large and small suppliers that Coles asserted had resulted from changes Coles had made to its supply chain.
The ACCC alleges that in relation to 200 of its smaller suppliers, Coles required agreement by the supplier to the rebate within a matter of days. If these suppliers declined to agree to pay the rebate, Coles personnel were allegedly instructed to escalate the matter to more senior staff, and to threaten commercial consequences if the supplier did not agree.
http://www.foodmag.com.au/news/woolworths-demands-growers-pay-for-jamie-oliver-ca
on 07-06-2014 12:54 PM
Now, who is greedy?
on 07-06-2014 04:52 PM
on 07-06-2014 05:33 PM
A clsssic example of what can happen if you don't have a Union to look after you.
on 07-06-2014 08:14 PM
@pinau86 wrote:
@lind9650 wrote:Now, who is greedy?
Who's greedy?
Woolies have share holders to look after. ACCC have no business sticking their noses in where it's not wanted.
Ahhhh, a share holder talking.
Break the Growers back, as long as you can profit big time.
When there be no Australian growers anymore whom are you going to squeeze for more profit?
on 07-06-2014 08:35 PM
@lind9650 wrote:
@pinau86 wrote:
@lind9650 wrote:Now, who is greedy?
Who's greedy?
Woolies have share holders to look after. ACCC have no business sticking their noses in where it's not wanted.
Ahhhh, a share holder talking.
Break the Growers back, as long as you can profit big time.
When there be no Australian growers anymore whom are you going to squeeze for more profit?
the destitute and disenfranchised. It's an age old exploitation thing.
on 08-06-2014 02:20 PM
The ACCC may not be wanted to stick their noses in to Big W business, but they have every right to do so.
Businesses that make agreements with their competitors to fix prices, rig bids, share markets or restrict outputs are breaking laws and stealing from consumers and businesses by inflating prices, reducing choices and damaging the economy.
Those are illegal practices and punisable by law.
Erica
on 08-06-2014 05:37 PM
It's a sad state of affairs when retailers and corporations wield more power than governments
on 08-06-2014 05:45 PM
i quite often get phone calls from woolworths buyers saying they can get the same product from elsewhere for cheaper, can you better their price.
we never do. if you can get it cheaper elsewhere why try us. buyers lie too.
we do very little business with woolworths and don't need too
on 08-06-2014 10:43 PM
Its funny cause when I was at woolies just the other day, I did say wowowowow they are going all out..............who is paying for this.
I dont have young kids so I feel its a waste.
The cook guy is getting rich.