Could the supermarkets cripple our food industry: Gottliebsen

Rarely are chief executives more frank that Elders' Malcolm Jackman. At the end of his KGB interview, without naming Woolworths, Coles or Metcash, Malcolm Jackman accuses the supermarket chains of having a small group of buyers who are wiping out Australian food processing. You can read his exact words with this link.

 

I suspect that the chief executives of Wesfarmers, Woolworths and Metcash have no idea that this is their unintentional master plan. They are simply producing house brands and they are seeking the lowest possible source of food processing. They don’t care a damn where the processed food comes from so long as it meets their standards. I was alerted to the enormity of this process when my wife purchased breakfast cereal which had been shipped all the way from Wales.

Jackman says he is able to buy cans of Italian tomatoes for $1 a can. Clearly there are many countries that intensely value their food processing industries and are prepared to subsidise those industries with all sorts of goodies.

At the same time, in fairness to the small group of processed food buyers at Woolworths, Coles and Metcash, militant Australian unions have demanded crazy work practices in many Australian food processing plants. As a result, companies have not invested in the latest technology and therefore they have much higher costs than they need to have.

So the Australian food processing industry is being caught in a four-way squeeze – short-term thinking by supermarkets, crazy work practices, insufficient investment and subsidisation of rival producers by many countries. If this continues, in a few years almost all major food processing plants will be shut down and once they are shut down, subsidised exporters will know they have us at their mercy and will charge a lot more.

Meanwhile, it seems we will ship low-cost Australian crops into Asia and Europe, who will process them and send them back to Australia – if they don’t grow their own raw material.

Just as in minerals, we have become a quarry. We are going to emerge as an efficient producer of bulk products but we are in grave danger of closing our steel and food processing plants. Leaving aside small specialty plants, Australians will have to rely on overseas food processing if they want their bulk products converted to edible food items.

Jackman says the matter has been placed before the current government but it is almost impossible that a Labor government could tackle the militant food unions that are more intent on getting retrenchment benefits than protecting jobs. All we can hope for is that Malcolm Jackman’s warning falls on fertile ground.

This article first appeared on Business Spectator.

Related Items :
Companies : Woolworths

Comments (2)
walterf
...
written by walterf, December 01, 2011
The problem is, who is listening that has the clout to make an impact on this huge problem? It is not as if one needs and economics degree to see the writing on the wall. You are right that executives who make buying decisions don't care as they are after the lowest cost possible.

Robert, you have highlighted a problem that everyone who shops sees. So if the the current actions are so simple to see (admittedly there could be an argument that the solution might be difficult) how can we let decision makers off the hook so easily?
bigalconnolly
...
written by bigalconnolly, December 01, 2011
This kind of monopoly has already lead to the near extinction of the corner Deli/Milk bar as they simply cannot compete with buying power and the fact the so many "Anchor Tenants" actually control rents and marketing costs in the suburban shopping centres.

As these three giants continue to dominate the food supply chain and continue to aquire other supply chains such as Petrol, Motoring and Electronics it will not be too long before you see the squeeze on Independant Fast Food/Take Away outlets. It is well documented that the largest Fast Food chain owns the 2nd largest property portfolio in the world, so where will this leave the Independant competition when they get them in their sites.

Independant Fast Food/Take Away enterpises had better wake up to themselves soon and unite in order to have a fighting chance, or it is only a matter of time before they end up like those deli's and dinosaurs.... extinct.

Cheers

Big Al Connolly aka
The Fast Food Entrepreneur
and Hotdog Master
www.facebook.com/TheFastFoodEntrepreneur

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