French bill moves food price deadline up to middle of January

Reuters

Published Sep 27, 2023 05:03

Updated Sep 27, 2023 05:14

PARIS (Reuters) - Food retailers and producers in France will have to wrap up annual price negotiations by Jan. 15 instead of by the traditional March 1 deadline under a bill the French government will send to the parliament on Wednesday.

Whereas retailers and producers in most countries regularly adjust prices of food and other products, French law stipulates a three-month window when such negotiations can take place - usually between Dec. 1 and March 1 every year.

However, a 10% average increase agreed for this year has locked in high prices in French supermarkets even as global food commodity prices have tumbled.

That has spurred consumers to cut back on purchases and left the government struggling to strong arm retailers and producers to reduce prices.

In the hope of getting lower prices to consumers faster, the government's new bill, which was shared with journalists on Tuesday, moves the deadline for 2024 up to Jan. 15.

A finance ministry government source said that some companies had not waited for the bill and had already started negotiating since Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said at the end of August that the deadline would be moved forward.