Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Politics

Is ‘greedflation’ behind your soaring grocery bills?

Even the Bank of England is now admitting companies' profits are growing

greedflation, andrew bailey

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey said profits are 'rebuilding' for businesses. Image: TOLGA AKMEN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

With prices seeming to increase every time you visit the shops, it’s natural to wonder whether retailers are using the climate of inflation as cover to ratchet up their prices. The idea has even been given its own fancy term: greedflation.

Inflation, currently sitting at 8.7% as of May 2023, is having an impact on everybody through higher prices. But there are knock-on effects, with the Bank of England raising the base rate of interest to 5% to try and combat inflation, meaning those on tracker mortgages face increased payments.

The narrative has long been that wage rises, along with high energy prices, are fuelling inflation. As thousands continue striking for better wages, government ministers are insisting meeting those demands would make inflation worse. Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey has said “unsustainable” pay rises are stoking inflation, and told employees to show restraint in their demands for a pay rise.

But new evidence shows another side of the story. Is greedflation partly to blame for rising prices?

Even the Bank of England and the IMF are now admitting retailers are making higher profits as they raise prices in shops by more than their costs are increasing.

As Bailey put it in a letter to Jeremy Hunt: “The continued pass-through of costs to consumer prices may also be indicative of some rebuilding of profit margins by retailers”. 

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty
Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

Or in simpler terms, a significant chunk of the pain we’re seeing at the supermarket is from retailers hoping to make bigger profits.

Your support changes lives. Find out how you can help us help more people by signing up for a subscription

Research backs this up: the Unite trade union found in March that profit margins rose from 5.7% to 10.7% between 2019 and 2022. Bailey had previously said he had no evidence that companies were profiteering, but that they needed to show restraint on prices regardless.

This all adds to a growing argument against the “wage-price spiral” narrative, which the UK government has used as a key reason to turn down the pay demands of striking workers. Where once it was just trade unions, now international institutions are pointing the finger at businesses and raising the spectre of greedflation.

The IMF has said corporate profits are the biggest driver of inflation in Europe, while in the UK pay rises for the top 10% of earners have been driving price rises. 

Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank, said interest rates and inflation would remain high if firms don’t start accepting lower profits.

Meanwhile, the idea of wages driving inflation has been questioned by economists. The government only has control over public sector wages – and these only account for one in five workers, said Henry Parkes, a senior economist at IPPR. 

“Furthermore, in other areas demand is actively being sucked out of the economy through the highest interest rates since 2004, whilst the Bank of England found that investment intentions are plummeting,” Parkes added.

So what’s to be done? Responding to Bailey, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said he will meet with regulators to make sure the falling cost of production is passed on to shoppers in the same way profits have been. Over to you, supermarkets.

Do you have opinions to share about this? We want to hear from you. Get in touch and tell us more.

Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter

Advertising helps fund Big Issue’s mission to end poverty

READER-SUPPORTED SINCE 1991

Reader-supported journalism that doesn’t just report problems, it helps solve them.

Recommended for you

View all
Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell on benefit cuts, landlords and taking on Farage: 'There's no quick fix'
Lucy Powell in House of Commons
Politics

Labour deputy leader Lucy Powell on benefit cuts, landlords and taking on Farage: 'There's no quick fix'

From broken railways to packed prisons: Margaret Thatcher's legacy continues to cast its long shadow
Politics

From broken railways to packed prisons: Margaret Thatcher's legacy continues to cast its long shadow

What does Keir Starmer's personality type tell us about him?
Prime minister Keir Starmer on the phone
Psychology

What does Keir Starmer's personality type tell us about him?

There's no trust left in the world. How can we get it back?
Trust

There's no trust left in the world. How can we get it back?

Reader-supported journalism that doesn’t just report problems, it helps solve them.

Every day, Big Issue digs deeper – speaking up for those society overlooks. Will you help us keep doing this work?