Tesco hits a new
low with arrival of the £1.99 chicken – The Independent
By Martin Hickman, Consumer Affairs
Correspondent
Wednesday, 6 February 2008
Tesco slashed the price of a whole
chicken to £1.99 yesterday, in a move that critics warned would heap financial
pressure on the poultry industry and make it harder to the improve welfare of
factory-farmed animals.
Britain's biggest supermarket chain
said the price of a "standard" bird would be cut by 60 per cent until
Sunday to help families on tight budgets, adding that it had doubled its order
for higher-welfare chicken.
The animal welfare group, Compassion in
World Farming (CIWF), said the arrival of a £1.99 bird was
"depressing", as it followed weeks of publicity and debate about the
welfare of broiler chickens, arising from a Channel 4 series and campaign by
the chef High Fearnley-Whittingstall.
Dr Lesley Lambert, the CIWF's director
of research and education, said: "£1.99 doesn't reflect the real price of
producing a chicken. At the moment, farmers make only 2p per chicken, so this
will push them to the limit."
She said that Tesco should be cutting
the price of its higher-welfare chicken rather than its bottom-of-the-range
birds. However, Tesco, which said that a family of four would now be able to
eat a roast dinner for 99p each, claimed that it wanted to improve animal
welfare while helping shoppers squeezed by "mortgage worries, energy price
rises and inflation". Jonathan Church, a company spokesman, said: "We
have been working hard for a while to increase the amount of higher-welfare
chicken we sell and the recent debate in the media about chickens has helped
raise awareness of the choice available.
"But our investment in premium
chicken should not be seen as a move away from providing more affordable
options. No one should feel guilty for buying a chicken just because it is good
value. The only reduction we make is in the price, not the welfare."
The promotion – which was surprising
given Tesco's refusal to respond to a £2 chicken offer from Asda last year –
could prompt a supermarket price war. Last night, a spokeswoman for Asda said:
"We always endeavour to be best on price. As far as I know we have no
plans to cut prices, but it might all change tomorrow."
Sales of free-range chickens increased
over the past month after Channel 4's week-long series Hugh's Chicken Run
showed how the country's 800 million broiler chickens lead cramped, painful
lives compared with their free-range counterparts.
In a study published today in the
Public Library of Science One journal, researchers at Bristol University found
that, by the age of 40 days, 27 per cent of fast-growing indoor broiler
chickens have walking problems. Three in 100 were completely lame. The study,
funded by Defra, warned that only the introduction of slower-growing birds
would improve welfare standards.
In his television show,
Fearnley-Whittingstall divided a chicken shed in two to show how the lives of
free-range and standard birds differ; his mass-produced birds had higher rates
of leg burn and had to be culled in greater numbers.
Fearnley-Whittingstall said yesterday:
"I'm very surprised [at Tesco] because everybody is selling out of
free-range chicken. To launch a £1.99 chicken is in direct contradiction to a
statement [the chief executive] Sir Terry Leahy made last summer when he said
he didn't want to get into a food price war on chicken."
This sort of pricing
activity confirms the following article in Monday’s Telegraph:
Tesco 'curbs' its suppliers'
prices – The Telegraph
By James Hall
Suppliers to Tesco, the UK's biggest
supermarket, have complained that the retailer is not allowing them to increase
their prices until the end of its financial year in a bid to keep prices in its
stores down.
In an attempt to counter food price
inflation, suppliers say Tesco has halted any price increases until at least
the end of this month, when its financial year ends.
Some claim the retailer has launched an
initiative called "Project Iceberg", which has frozen the price Tesco
pays suppliers for goods.
One senior food industry source told
The Sunday Telegraph: "Tesco is worried about soaring raw material prices,
but wants to have a period of stable retail prices."
A Tesco spokesman said that the
retailer's priority is to offer shoppers the lowest prices possible. He added
that all food retailers are under growing pressure from rising prices. However
the spokesman said that Project Iceberg does not exist and denied that there is
any formal strategy to freeze price increases.
"It is a no-brainer that there is
cost inflation in the system for the first time in 10 years. Our priority is to
do what we can to protect the interests of the customers. Suppliers have always
had to argue for price rises, and that remains the case," said the
spokesman.
He added that there may well have been
price freezes in areas where there is particular cost pressure.
"It is down to individual
relationships [between Tesco buyers and suppliers]," he said.
The commercial director at a leading
ambient food supplier told Food Manufacturer, the magazine, that Tesco is
playing hardball: "I haven't witnessed anything like this in 10 years.
"Basically, they won't give us
anything until after the year end, and after that we don't know what the line
will be. It's impossible to get price increases. It's an unsquareable circle
with raw material price inflation so pronounced."
One retail observer said it is no
surprise that food retailers are being strict with their suppliers.
"Supermarkets' margins are so thin that there is no wriggle room. The
dynamic at the moment is very squeezed," he said.
Wholesale food prices are estimated to have risen by 7.4 per cent over the last year.