Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2021 11:06 AM
  • Report on grocery pay finds cartel-like practices

Canada's competition laws should be changed to prohibit cartel-like practices and wage-fixing deals in the country's grocery sector, a new report by the House of Commons industry committee presented in the lower chamber on Wednesday said.

The report comes a year after Canada's big three grocers — Loblaw Companies Ltd., Metro Inc. and Sobeys parent company Empire Company Ltd. — all cut temporary pandemic-related pay bonuses within a day of each other last June.

The move prompted the committee to hold hearings on the issue and invite senior grocery executives to explain their decisions.

While the food retailers admitted to communicating with each other about ending their respective wage premiums of about $2 an hour, they denied co-ordinating the termination of the pay bumps.

Metro president and CEO Eric La Flèche said he reached out to his counterparts at Loblaw and Sobeys to gather information — not to obtain a tacit agreement on wages.

"The more information I have on what others are doing, how they are treating their employees and how much they are paying and for how long, is valid information that I tried to get," he told the committee last July.

But competing grocers communicating about wages at the executive level risks "a slippery slope towards cartel-like conduct," Matthew Boswell, commissioner of competition at the Competition Bureau, testified during the committee's hearings.

Yet the bureau lacks the power under the Competition Act to prosecute such behaviour and faces significant resource constraints, he said.

Canada’s competition legislation diverges from laws in the United States, where federal competition authorities can criminally prosecute wage-fixing agreements, Boswell told the committee.

The bi-partisan committee recommended Ottawa align Canadian competition legislation with American legislation in order to to criminally prosecute such agreements.

"Doing so would clarify competition-related obligations for businesses active in Canadian and American markets, and facilitate co-operation between competition authorities in Canada and the U.S.," the report said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Injunction against quarantine hotel policy denied

Injunction against quarantine hotel policy denied
A government order that went into effect on Feb. 14 mandates that anyone entering Canada from abroad must stay in a federally approved hotel for the first three nights of a 14-day quarantine.

Injunction against quarantine hotel policy denied

Cases of COVID variants on the rise, Tam says

Cases of COVID variants on the rise, Tam says
Even as vaccination programs ramp up, the growing number of variant cases is sparking fears of a third wave.

Cases of COVID variants on the rise, Tam says

Canada joins allies for sanctions against China

Canada joins allies for sanctions against China
Foreign Affairs Minister Marc Garneau says in taking the dramatic step, Canada is joining its partners in calling on China to put an end to a systematic campaign of repression.

Canada joins allies for sanctions against China

Liberals sharpen climate change attack on Tories

Liberals sharpen climate change attack on Tories
The existing document does discuss curbing greenhouse gas emissions but does not specifically acknowledge the existence of climate change.

Liberals sharpen climate change attack on Tories

Probes found no wrongdoing by Vance: Harper aide

Probes found no wrongdoing by Vance: Harper aide
Ray Novak says those probes, largely led by senior public servants, did not turn up any evidence of wrongdoing before Vance took over as commander of the Canadian Armed Forces.

Probes found no wrongdoing by Vance: Harper aide

COVID-19 vaccine deliveries ramping up this week

COVID-19 vaccine deliveries ramping up this week
Shipments of both the AstraZeneca vaccine and the one-dose shot from Johnson & Johnson are widely expected to start arriving in Canada in April, though that timeline too has yet to be finalized.

COVID-19 vaccine deliveries ramping up this week