Supermarket price wars ‘chilling prospect' for farmers, says MP in regulator bid
Supermarket price wars are a 'chilling prospect' for food growers, an MP has said amid efforts to join up regulation covering shops and farmers.
Alistair Carmichael said the farm-to-fork pipeline needed 'direct action' from the Government and warned that 'without it, we risk losing domestic food production and any notion of food security'.
He urged MPs to back his Food Products (Market Regulation and Public Procurement) Bill, which secured its first reading on Wednesday, days after Asda bosses indicated the chain was planning to set up a grocery price war.
The chain's chairman Allan Leighton vowed last week to 'undertake a substantive and well-backed programme of investment in price, availability and the shopping experience', amid efforts to regain customers' trust in the brand.
Mr Carmichael told the Commons: 'For farmers, that is a chilling prospect.
'If supermarkets are about to embark on a race to the bottom, then we can be pretty sure that it will be farmers, not company executives or shareholders, who will be expected to take the hit.'
The Liberal Democrat MP for Orkney and Shetland said it was 'not for' Parliament to 'pick a winner in a fight between supermarkets', but he warned that 'any supermarket that thinks it can rebuild its balance sheet on the back of Britain's farmers might find themselves in front of the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee', which he chairs.
Mr Carmichael said his Bill, if agreed to, would require co-ordination between two existing watchdogs – the Groceries Code Adjudicator and the Agricultural Supply Chain Adjudicator.
It will next be listed for debate on June 20.
He previously described 'a bit of regulation at one end and a bit of regulation at the other and no wiring between the two and nothing actually even to join together the two bits of regulation'.
Supermarkets backtrack on the commitments they make to farmers without a reason and say 'we don't want your product any more', Mr Carmichael told the PA news agency, adding: 'That farmer or processor will probably have gone to some expense to market and batch and package their product in such a way that the supermarket demands but they'll pull the rug out from underneath you.'
He also said that if supermarkets decide to cut milk prices 'everybody then passes that on down the line to the family farmer, and the farmer essentially at the end of the day is left having to shrug his shoulders and just take the hit'.
The Groceries Supply Code of Practice (GSCOP) promotes 'fair dealing' and discourages supermarkets from demanding changes to their supply chains without 'reasonable notice'.
Mr Carmichael said farmers 'take it' because complaining to the Groceries Code Adjudicator, who is supposed to enforce the code, could mean they struggle to 'get back in' with the supermarkets and suffer 'bad long-term consequences'.
A new regulator could have built-in protections, including the power and resources to proactively investigate suspected breaches without the need for farmers to complain.
Asked whether shoppers will face higher prices amid efforts to pass a bigger share of sales to farmers, Mr Carmichael said: 'I don't think the people who can afford to be impacted by this are the consumers.
'I think that the people who are doing rather nicely out of this are the supermarkets and indeed some of the processors and distributors as well.
'So if you're going to find a way of improving the lot of the farmer you have to do it in a way that doesn't actually work to the detriment of the consumer, and that's why you've got to have a regulator that is big enough and has sufficient resource to be taken seriously by supermarkets.'
The MP said subsidies since the time of the Second World War have meant the food market had already experienced significant Government interventions.
Several organisation leaders have indicated their support for the proposal, including at the National Farmers' Union (NFU) and the Food, Farming and Countryside Commission.
Dr Charlie Taverner, farming futures policy lead at the Food, Farming and Countryside Commission, said: 'In our new report Paying the Price, we found that consolidation, driven by decades of government policy to cheapen food, means farmers have little bargaining power and big corporations have a disproportionate influence on government policy.
'This long-term squeeze on farming profits, with farmers' incomes having barely risen in 50 years, has had major costs to our health, the planet and rural communities.
'Alistair Carmichael's idea of a farm-to fork watchdog is exactly the kind of bold thinking our report recommends.'
NFU president Tom Bradshaw called for a 'policy which doesn't undermine' farmers, adding: 'Strengthening farmers' position means making our food system more resilient and provides a trading environment that remains competitive and innovative.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
26 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Pakistan Backs Trump for Nobel Peace Prize He's Long Craved
Pakistan said it will nominate US President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, a move that may have as much to do with annoying rival India as it does with building stronger ties to Washington. The recommendation is being made for Trump's 'decisive intervention and pivotal leadership during the recent India-Pakistan crisis,' according to a social media post on Saturday by Pakistan's government.


CBS News
5 hours ago
- CBS News
Colorado Congressman Joe Neguse leads effort to end corruption in the federal government
Americans' trust in the federal government has been eroding for years. According to Pew Research, 77% of Americans trusted the federal government to do the right thing "all or most of the time" in 1964. Today, only 22% do. Rep. Joe Neguse, the U.S. House Assistant Minority Leader and a Democrat who represents Colorado's 2nd Congressional District, is now leading a bipartisan effort aimed at restoring that trust. "End Corruption Now" is a sweeping package of bills that targets corruption and cronyism at the highest levels of government. While scandals involving bribery, extortion, kickbacks, and conspiracies have permeated American politics throughout history, Neguse says the graft today is next level. "The difference in my view is the normalization that I think citizens have become almost desensitized to the everyday corruption that is now so rampant in our nation's capital," he said. Rep. Joe Neguse, the U.S. House Assistant Minority Leader and a Democrat who represents Colorado's 2nd Congressional District, during the House Democrats 2025 Issues Conference at the Lansdowne Resort in Leesburg, Virginia, on March 12, 2025. Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images From insider trading by members of Congress, to self-dealing by the president, Neguse says corruption is endemic in D.C. Many politicians have lost their moral compass, he says, and the public has lost faith. "I think the president and frankly I think members of Congress are constantly testing to see how much they can get away with. And the more that voters become and citizens become apathetic and desensitized to this type of corruption, the more corruption will occur," Neguse said. Which is why he is leading an effort to change the status quo with bills that among other things ban members of Congress from ever serving as lobbyists, prohibit them from serving on corporate boards, and bar them, their spouses, and children from trading stocks. "We ought to be willing to condemn that and to stand up and say that that's wrong irrespective of one's political affiliation," he said. The bills also take aim at the executive branch by prohibiting CEOs convicted of financial crimes from serving in the White House. They also install new oversight measures for the president after Neguse says Trump dismantled many of them. He fired about 18 inspector generals -- government's independent watchdogs -- and suspended enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act even as he accepts a luxury jetliner from Qatar and other foreign governments spend billions of dollars on his family's real estate ventures and his crypto meme coin. Neguse says Trump's pay-to play schemes are brazen and dangerous. "It gives him an immense amount of power that no chief executive has had or has attempted to acquire in our country's 250-year history. The silver lining here is we have the agency to be able to stop it, right? We can ameliorate all this corruption. We can prevent it, we can end it and we can end it now with these common sense measures if we have the political will to do it." The package of bills also includes legislation to clearly define an "official act" by a public official after the Supreme Court redefined the definition of bribery and a bill called the "Musk Act," which requires government employees to recuse themselves from any matters that affect their financial interests or that of previous employers. Neguse says when he first introduced the bill placing a lifetime ban on members of Congress serving as lobbyists seven years ago, he had two co-sponsors. He now has 85. But while leadership in both parties and President Trump support reforms like banning members of Congress from trading stocks, Neguse says the bills will only pass if the public demands it.


Bloomberg
7 hours ago
- Bloomberg
India to See Limited Inflation Fallout From Oil, Government Adviser Says
India's top government adviser said rising oil prices are likely to have a limited impact on inflation for now and Asia's third-largest economy remains in a relatively favorable position to weather global risks. While high oil prices due to the ongoing crisis in the Middle East is a matter of concern, 'it is still not something that is going to be significant in terms of impact,' Chief Economic Adviser V. Anantha Nageswaran said in an interview on Friday. Cooling inflation, ample liquidity and low interest rates will provide the right conditions for India's economy despite global uncertainties, he added.