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The Competition Commission proposals in full
Tesco, Britain’s biggest supermarket group, last night attacked proposals from
the Competition Commission that could curb its dominance of retailing in
towns across the UK.
In its long-awaited report into competition in the £120 billion groceries
sector, the competition watchdog recommended a new “competition test”, under
which authorities would have to take account of how many outlets a
supermarket already has in a particular area. If it is deemed that there are
too many branches of Tesco in a given area, for example, the council could
support an application from Asda instead.
The test, which could give shoppers a wider choice of supermarkets in their
local areas, will apply to all grocery developments above 1,000 sq m and
will be overseen by the Office of Fair Trading. Supermarkets could be forced
to fund the change, the commission said.
Tesco, which dominates the market, has fiercely opposed such a move. Last
night it condemned the proposed test as “a growth cap on successful
retailers whose activities in this highly competitive market. . . benefit
consumers.”
Lucy Neville-Rolfe, director of legal affairs, said that the proposals would
introduce “additional bureaucracy, costs and delays, which we estimate at up
to £150 million a year”.
The new test was part of a package of measures unveiled by the commission
after a two-year inquiry into the market and the 75 per cent market
dominance of the big four players – Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons.
Other measures included the creation of an independent ombudsman, or “shopping
czar”, to oversee a strengthened code of practice for supermarkets and to
arbitrate on disputes between them and their suppliers, and an end to
so-called “restrictive covenants”, under which supermarkets seek to block
rivals from entering an area by preventing them from snapping up land that
they are selling.
However, the commission stopped short of recommending that retailers sell land
or stores, as some supermarkets had feared that it would.
Charities and small retail groups complained that the measures were “too
timid” and would do little to prevent the creation of “clone towns” and the
gradual demise of diversity on the high street.
Sandra Bell, of Friends of the Earth, said: “Unless it [the competition test]
is combined with strengthened planning rules to restrict supermarket
expansion, it could simply mean that we get more big supermarkets being
built next to each other.”
James Lowman, chief executive of the Association of Convenience Stores, said:
“It is extremely disappointing that the proposed remedies are so timid.
There is a very real problem in this market and the measures recommended go
nowhere near far enough.”
The new code of practice will include all grocery retailers with a UK turnover
greater than £1 billion. The commission’s findings will be consulted upon
before the watchdog releases its final report at the end of April.
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