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A shopper in a grocery store.

A customer shops for bread in a grocery store.

(Photo: Anthony Albright/Flickr/cc)

Corporate Greed Is Costing You at the Grocery Store

Consolidation in our food system affects more than just prices. It also damages whole local economies.

During this year's State of the Union Address, President Joe Biden spoke to what most people in the U.S. are seeing right now — trips to the grocery store are more expensive than ever. The reason? Corporate greed.

“Too many corporations raise their prices to pad their profits, charging you more and more for less and less,” he said.

We couldn’t agree more. In the days before the State of the Union, we found that from 2020 to 2024, the cost to feed a family of four grew 2.5 more than the rate of inflation.

Meanwhile, corporate profits rose five times faster than inflation from 2020 to 2022 — some to record highs. What’s more, a recent report from the Biden administration shows how big companies benefited from worsening the supply chain problems that raised prices during the pandemic.

This trend has been enabled by lax antitrust enforcement that has let corporate giants get bigger. And as they get bigger, their power grows, too. Luckily, we know just how to tackle this — and so does Biden.

How Corporate Consolidation Leads to Higher Prices

First, let’s take a look at how corporate consolidation works in the American economy. We say markets are “consolidated” when a small handful of very big companies dominate an entire sector. They do this by buying (acquisitions) or joining (mergers) with another company.

Consolidation gives these giant corporations the ability to dictate what goes on in the market, from prices to working conditions. As the president himself said, “Grocers in consolidated markets charge you more because you have nowhere else to shop.” That’s market power.

And corporations are amassing it all across our food system. A few huge players have taken over the markets for dairy, packaged foods, seeds, grocery stores, and more.

Previous governments have failed to stop this trend. Decades ago, the U.S. took consolidation seriously, but more recent administrations have sided with corporations over families. They failed to stop mergers and acquisitions or the unfair practices that big corporations use to cement their reign. As a result, food prices are soaring, while CEOs and shareholders pocket unprecedented profits.

Consolidation Means Big Wins for Corporations, Big Losses for Everyone Else

Consolidation in our food system affects more than just prices. It also damages whole local economies. For example, big grocery stores can adopt cost-cutting measures that make it impossible for smaller stores to compete. Small businesses shutter. Then, because the big stores are the only option in town, they can raise prices again — and that’s exactly what they do.

Growing consolidation and market power also gives corporations more leverage to pay lower wages, while those at the top hoard profits for themselves. For instance, Walmart is the biggest grocery chain in the country, and it paid its CEO $25 million in 2023. That’s 933 times the median associate’s wages, which are also below the poverty line for a family of four. At the same time, the grocery juggernaut saw a $163 million increase in profits from 2022 to 2023, for a total of over $13.6 billion.

Moreover, market power enables corporations to get away with harmful, cost-cutting practices, like the poor manure management on factory farms that pollutes communities with waste. Such practices directly harm our climate, environment, and public health.

Market power also helps companies get away with shady tactics, like charging us the same for less product. This “shrinkflation” is inflating how much we spend on household essentials like food, soap, and toilet paper.

The bigger and more powerful a corporation is, the more it can duck accountability for its actions — and the more it can influence policymakers by spending millions on lobbying to sway policy in their favor.

Biden Is Fighting High Grocery Prices at the Root

We have antitrust agencies designed to rein in corporate consolidation. For example, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Antitrust Division of the Justice Department (DOJ) are supposed to assess proposed mergers and step in if they pose a threat to markets. We also have antitrust laws like the Packers and Stockyards Act, which is supposed to ensure fair and competitive markets in the meat industry.

Yet, antitrust enforcement has fallen — that is, until Biden came into office. The president has taken the kind of action to tackle market power that we haven’t seen for decades.

His 2021 executive order began tackling monopolies in all corners of the economy, especially in food and agriculture. It included 70 actions to foster more competition, including directing the USDA to create rules to breathe new life into the Packers and Stockyards Act. Two of those rules have been finalized so far.

This executive order also urged the FTC and DOJ to revise merger guidelines. These detail how these agencies evaluate the risks of mergers and decide whether they’ll challenge them. (Food & Water Watch submitted comments with recommendations to strengthen the guidelines against harmful mergers.)

And, in December of last year, the Biden administration set a record for merger challenges. The FTC and DOJ issued the highest number of challenges since the U.S. began requiring antitrust reviews before mergers almost five decades ago.

Now, in March, the president announced a new strike force to tackle “unfair and illegal corporate pricing.” These are exactly the kinds of actions we need to stand up to corporations and put American families first.

The Next Big Fight: A Grocery Mega-Merger from Hell

Yet more grocery consolidation looms on the horizon. In 2022, grocery giant Kroger announced it planned to buy its competitor, Albertsons — these two are the second and fourth-largest grocery stores in the country, respectively.

This $24.6 billion deal would be a gold mine for the companies’ CEOs and owners, and it would cement Kroger’s place near the peak of the grocery store food chain.

However, thanks to the work of organizations including Food & Water Watch, Biden’s FTC has recognized how harmful this merger will be. In February, it announced a suit to block the acquisition, which is scheduled for trial in August. This is a welcome step in preventing this disastrous megamerger — and we need more action like it to curb growing market power.

Biden can and must finalize the third rule strengthening the Packers and Stockyards Act. He also must continue opposing mergers in the ag and food sectors, like Kroger-Albertsons.

At the same time, Food & Water Watch will keep working to expose the truth behind rising prices and all the other failures of our food system. We’re debunking corporations’ lies and excuses, and we’re shining light on their tactics for profiting at everyone else’s expense. We’re fighting for the fair food system we need to ensure healthy, safe, and affordable food for everyone.

© 2021 Food & Water Watch