Evidence session
Fairness in the food supply chain
Tuesday 30 April at 2.30pm, Committee room 6, Palace of Westminster
Watch live on parliamentlive.tv
Senior executives from five of the biggest supermarket chains will be questioned about retailers’ role in the food supply chain, by MPs on the cross-party EFRA Committee on Tuesday at 2.30pm.
The session will be an opportunity for MPs to examine the impact of food price inflation on supermarkets, manufacturers, suppliers, and consumers.
As part of their ongoing inquiry into fairness in the food supply chain, the Committee has so far taken evidence from academics, food producers, and manufacturers. In this fourth evidence session, MPs’ focus will be on the relationship between food production costs, food prices and retail prices, and how structural relationships between food producers, manufacturers, and retailers could be improved.
Dr Neil Hudson MP Member of the EFRA Committee said;
“Food security is part of our national security. It is so important that our brilliant farmers and producers are fairly rewarded for keeping our nation food secure and supplying food for our tables.”
“Our EFRA Committee Inquiry into Fairness in the Food Supply Chain continues this week where we will probe the major supermarkets about food inflation, fair pricing for customers and fair reward for their supplying farmers and growers.”
“ It is so important that there is fairness in the food supply chain and our Committee will focus on holding these major retailers to account on this.”
Witnesses will be questioned on the nature of retailers’ profits in the context of the high food price environment and how they ensure that profits are distributed throughout their supply chains. They will also be asked about the extent to which the position of consumers is considered when setting prices.
The session will also see retailers questioned about the practice of shrinkflation and MPs are likely to ask whether retailers should be doing more to inform customers when package sizes have been reduced.
In previous evidence to the Committee, MPs heard that retailers sometimes brand products in ways which could be misleading for consumers, and they are likely to ask witnesses how supermarkets’ labelling practices affect consumer confidence and understanding.
Witnesses from 14.30 on Tuesday 30 April:
- Dom Morrey, Commercial Director for Fresh Food, Tesco
- Rhian Bartlett, Chief Food Commercial Director, Sainsbury's
- Kris Comerford, Chief Commercial Officer for Food, Asda
- Charlotte Di Cello, Commercial Director, Waitrose
- Richard Bourns, Chief Commercial Officer, Lidl GB