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Friday, 27 April 2007, 12:23 GMT 13:23 UK

Supermarkets 'abusing position'

Cup of tea The UK's supermarkets may be exploiting their "monopoly position" to increase prices, a study claims.

Two Royal Bank of Scotland economists compared recent food price rises in the UK with those seen on the continent.

Coffee and tea prices, for example, rose 10.2% in the UK in the year to 31 March, but only increased by 1% in the eurozone area, they found.

The British Retail Consortium, which represents the supermarkets, rejected the survey's findings.

'Fierce competition'

Overall, the price of food and non-alcoholic drinks rose 5.6% in the UK over the past year, compared with 1.9% in the eurozone area, found the report.

Vegetable prices increased 10.2% compared with only 3.1% on the continent.

The report concluded that while some of the price rises in the UK could be attributed to higher energy costs, this would not be enough to account for the size of the difference between here and the eurozone area.

"It may be that the supermarkets are increasingly able to exploit their monopoly position and raise prices even when consumer spending is not especially robust," said the report.

The British Retail Consortium (BRC), which represents supermarkets, denied the notion that they wield monopoly power.

"There is fierce competition between supermarkets, which has been borne out the reports so far from the Competition Commission's investigation," said the BRC's Richard Dodd.

"A typical trolley load is currently 7% cheaper than it was in 2000," he added.



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Related to this story:
Tesco denies market stranglehold (02 Apr 07 |  Business )
Grocery probe eyes local markets (23 Jan 07 |  Business )
Shoppers turn to web for bargains (25 May 05 |  Technology )
'Rip-off' Britain investigated (20 Sep 02 |  Business )
Is Britain really a rip-off? (10 Sep 02 |  Politics )
Rip-off Britain "a myth" (24 Jan 00 |  Business )

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