Why aren’t more foreign grocers in Canada? Lack of space a hurdle: minister
Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne says he is working hard to try to rein in high grocery prices, despite there being no windfall tax for grocers in the 2024 budget after prior threats to impose tax measures if prices weren’t brought under control.
In an interview on The West Block, Champagne told host Mercedes Stephenson that he still believes competition remains the best way to rein in food prices.
“We have too much concentration when it comes to grocers in the country,” Champagne said.
In recent months, Champagne says he has been courting foreign grocers to enter the Canadian market.
He says he will make announcements once there are deals finalized, but an unnamed American grocer pointed out a significant hurdle to entering the northern market.
“I met one of them in the United States, and the biggest hurdle they had was about leases. They could not find 400 or 500 leases or properties to lease in the country despite them being very big, billions of dollars,” Champagne said.
“So, is it easy? No. Is it worth trying? Definitely.”
As part of the 2023 fall economic statement, the government introduced reforms to the Competition Act with a focus on grocers. Key among them, giving the Competition Bureau subpoena power to collect information from companies like grocers as part of market studies and making it illegal for corporate grocers to prevent independent stores from setting up shop in the same commercial building.
In his interview on The West Block, Champagne hinted that these reforms have American grocers taking another look at Canada.
On Thursday, Champagne took part in a “historic” announcement in Alliston, Ont., with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Honda executives on the Japanese