Retailers hit out at plans for voluntary worth caps on some meals

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he Government is going through a backlash from retailers over its plans to encourage supermarkets to impose voluntary worth caps on meals staples to assist with the price of residing.

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Downing Street is known to be drawing up proposals to advocate for charging the bottom potential quantity for some primary merchandise like bread and milk.

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But the British Retail Consortium (BRC) mentioned the measures wouldn't make a “jot of difference” to pricing and warned they might thwart efforts to chop inflation.

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The opt-in scheme, modelled on an analogous settlement in France, would permit supermarkets to pick out which gadgets they'd cap, the Sunday Telegraph reported.

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It was ridiculed by opposition MPs on Sunday who in contrast the plans to pricing controls launched by Conservative prime minister Edward Heath within the Seventies.

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A No 10 supply mentioned the proposals are at “drawing board stage” however harassed they'd solely be carried out at retailers’ discretion.

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“The Government is not considering imposing price caps. Any scheme to help bring down food prices for consumers would be voluntary and at retailers’ discretion,” a Government spokesperson mentioned.

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“We know the pressure households are under with rising costs and while inflation is coming down, food prices remain stubbornly high. That’s why the Chancellor has been meeting with the food sector to see what more can be done.

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“We continue to support households through our £94 billion package, worth £3,300 on average per household this year and last.”

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The optionally available side of the scheme has led critics to query whether or not it should have any impact on prices, whereas right-wing suppose tank the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) branded it a “pointless gimmick”.

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Andrew Opie, director of meals and sustainability on the BRC, mentioned: “This will not make a jot of difference to prices.

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“As commodity prices drop, many of the costs keeping inflation high are now arising from the muddle of new regulation coming from Government.

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“Rather than recreating 1970s-style price controls, the Government should focus on cutting red tape so that resources can be directed to keeping prices as low as possible.”

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IEA economics fellow Julian Jessop mentioned: “Caps on food prices are at best a pointless gimmick and, at worst, harmful to the very people they are supposed to help.

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“It is not even certain that the prices of capped goods would end up lower than if there were no cap.”

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It comes after Chancellor Jeremy Hunt backed rate of interest hikes – even when they threat plunging the UK into recession – in an effort to fight hovering inflation.

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Although down from 10.1 per cent in March, the Consumer Prices Index of inflation remained stubbornly excessive at 8.7 per cent in April.

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