• Store employees do not have the right to check your receipt after going through the self checkout (unless it’s at Costco)

    You were never trained on the operation of a self checkout machine

    Everything is a potato

      • “In Canadian law, store employees or staff are not allowed to physically stop you from leaving or search your belongings unless they actually witness you commit an offence,” she said. “You are free to walk past a receipt check, out the store.”

        She said the exception is when shoppers exit a retailer such as Costco, which can enforce receipt checks because people agree to them when they sign up for the required store membership.

        Source

        Edit: Unless you mean source for everything is a potato. That statement is self evident.

  •  nyan   ( @nyan@lemmy.cafe ) 
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    1310 months ago

    So what? The demand for food is inelastic—all humans need a decent amount of it and you can’t buy it used. Demand can never drop below a certain level, regardless of the price being charged. So regardless of how many companies are involved, they’ll make the most money by keeping the prices high. Actual competition doesn’t benefit them.

    You could replace the full text of any grocery company’s press releases and interviews these days with “Qu’ils mangent de la brioche,” and express the same thing much more succinctly.

  • They could start by focusing on profits instead of margins. I don’t care if your margins are 50% or .005%, if you’re extracting billions in profit, you have room to reduce your margins, preferably through some combination of price drops and increased wages for everyone who works in the actual retail outlet.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The top executive at Sobeys asserted on Monday that Canada has one of the most competitive grocery retail sectors on the planet, even as Canadians continue to feel the bite of higher prices.

    “Although our country’s food inflation has been among the lowest in the world, and Canada is among the most competitive nations on Earth when it comes to grocery retail, this provides little comfort to Canadians who are struggling,” Michael Medline told MPs on the House of Commons agriculture committee.

    “We also have meaningful plans and development to help stabilize food prices past January, but will not discuss these publicly as they remained commercially and competitively sensitive until launched in our stores,” Medline told MPs.

    The rapid run-up in grocery prices following the COVID-19 pandemic has led to the heightened scrutiny of Canadian grocers, particularly as some of them have reaped high profits.

    Alistair MacGregor, the NDP agriculture critic, spoke to reporters Monday afternoon ahead of the committee meeting and said he had reviewed the major grocers’ plans to stabilize prices.

    “And to tell you the truth, a lot of the information contained in these so-called confidential documents are stuff I could have found by reviewing their weekly flyers and looking with a simple Google search.”


    The original article contains 664 words, the summary contains 207 words. Saved 69%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!