The long-awaited, 441-page final report also doesn’t recommend new divestiture powers or breaking up the supermarkets.
Allegations of price gouging by the supermarket giants prompted an inquiry into the sector by the ACCC — but after a year of investigating, its final report hasn't been able to say whether it's taking ...
Both bills were announced Thursday, March 20, by freshman Rep. Laura Friedman, D-Glendale, whose 30th Congressional district ...
A year-long inquiry into Australian supermarket giants Coles and Woolworths by the competition regulator has found that, ...
After a 12-month inquiry, the regulator has not been able to support claims that Coles and Woolworths are to blame for the ...
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has released its final report into the supermarket inquiry. Here's ...
Instead of wagging fingers at the big chains for the economic challenges, politicians must get serious about tackling some of ...
The local market has swung between green and red on Friday. At lunch time AEDT, the ASX 200 index had ... Read More The post ...
The ACCC’s report on the supermarket duopoly’s market domination and price gouging once again highlights the need to make price gouging illegal and for economy-wide divestiture powers, the Greens say.
The competition watchdog has resisted calls for powers to break up major supermarkets in a report, while calling for more ...
Australia’s biggest supermarkets maintain the sector is highly competitive, while a former ACCC chair has come out swinging ...