Senate debates

Tuesday, 14 May 2024

Committees

Supermarket Prices Select Committee; Report

5:24 pm

Photo of Jordon Steele-JohnJordon Steele-John (WA, Australian Greens) Share this | Hansard source

The Greens set up a Senate inquiry into supermarkets to get some concrete steps to stop supermarkets' record profits while so many are living and struggling through a cost-of-living crisis. To quote directly from the inquiry:

The inquiry received overwhelming evidence that everyday Australians are increasingly struggling to afford to buy food as the price of groceries have skyrocketed in the last few years.

The government needs to break up Coles and Woolworths. These massive corporations are squeezing us for every dollar that they can get and acting in simply unconscionable ways on a mission to make profits while people are crunching numbers and trying to survive in the middle of this cost-of-living crisis. In Western Australia, people are having to choose between rent and food.

It has gotten this bad because both the Liberal Party and the Labor Party have taken donations from these corporations and then allowed these same corporations to do whatever they like when it comes to pricing the very food that we need to survive. It is a perverse and unjust system. The cost is measured in the hunger that grows in our communities and in parents having to choose to skip meals to make sure that their kids have fresh food for their lunch boxes at school. We need to talk very clearly about the fact that both sides of politics, for decades, have allowed the shareholders, the billionaires, and the owners and managers of these corporations to aggressively and parasitically monopolise the food creation and distribution market in this country.

Farmers have suffered, as they have been squeezed terribly, trying to make ends meet. There is a mental health crisis among farming communities because entire farms are going to the bank and are being sold off because you can't make money if Coles and Woolworths won't pay for what you are producing. The distributors are driven out of business because the corporate competitors that are backed up and owned by Coles and Woolworths are able to bid for the job far lower than it costs to do it to drive their competitors out of business. The small distributors and retailers trying to actually provide fresh nutritious food to their communities are driven out. They can't get any retail space, because, if they go into a space and try to sell some food, Coles and Woolies are already in there and they've scored a deal to be the only one selling food to that community.

It results in parents, in students, in disabled people and in people across communities not being able to eat. They're working from 11 o'clock one night through to eight o'clock the next morning, and, when they come home and look at a frozen lasagne in the fridge as the only thing that's there, they wonder: 'What is the point of going to work the next day? What is the point of everything I just did if I can't even put fresh food in the fridge?'

Now we need this parliament to take this issue seriously. We need this government to take this issue seriously. If the government wants to actually join with the Greens and the community in taking action right now, if they want to put their money where their mouth is as they wring their hands this evening and trot out their lines about the cost-of-living crisis that so many people are experiencing in this country, then they should get on board with the Greens' bill to give the government the power to break these corporations up and to introduce actual competition into the system. You should actually work with the Greens to drive the corporate donations out of this place that have so successfully bound the hands and gagged the mouths of so many ministers and politicians in this place. And, while you're at it, clamp down on these unfair trading practices. It is not okay that these two companies run this system in this way. It does not meet the expectations of the Australian people. Join us, the Greens, in doing something about it—in actually ensuring that fresh, nutritious food can be delivered to Australian communities. I seek leave to continue my remarks later.

Leave granted; debate adjourned.

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