30 April 2008, 15:01 PM
  • The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) said that small, independent shops have been let down by the Competition
    Commission in its inquiry into the grocery sector.

Despite a committee of MPs estimating that 2,000 small shops are going out of business each year, the FSB said that the Competition Commission had failed to come up with any remedies that would halt the decline.

Throughout the two-year investigation the FSB has been dismayed that the Competition Commission failed to consider the impact of supermarkets on independent retailing. In response the FSB set up its wide-ranging Keep Trade Local campaign to highlight issues that the Competition Commission failed to address. The campaign also aims to raise awareness of the value that small, independent retailers provide to consumers. This includes local products, more personal service and speciality goods not available in supermarkets.

Clive Davenport, FSB trade and industry chairman, said, “During the course of three investigations in seven years the Competition Commission has consistently failed to understand the value to consumers of small independent shops. This
latest inquiry has again missed the point.

“The remit of this inquiry was far too narrow. Supermarkets are forcing small shops out of business in many areas of retailing, not just groceries. Important issues such as the travesty of almost limitless free parking at out of town superstores while independent high street shops face ever-more stringent parking restrictions were not even considered.”

He adds, “People up and down the country can see that we are losing our small shops, but this report does little to solve the problem. We are in danger of sleepwalking into the death of our high streets. The FSB has been left with no alternative but to campaign across the country and raise political awareness. It is now up to our elected representatives to step in and prevent disaster.”

Ken Parsons, chief executive of the Rural Shops Alliance, commented, “This report was a major opportunity to curb the power of the large supermarket chains and to allow smaller shops to compete on a level playing field. Instead, the Commission is allowing the likes of Tesco to use their raw market power to continue their unfair buying terms. The consequence in the long term will be a lot of local communities facing the closure of their much-valued independent local shop.”