Skärholmen (Sweden) (AFP) – Swedish government officials are to meet food industry giants on Thursday to discuss soaring food costs and rising consumer anger in the Nordic country.

Food prices rose by 3.9 percent in February from the same month a year earlier, the highest annual rate in two years, according to the country’s official statistics agency.

Independent watchdog site Matpriskollen (The Food Price Checker) found in January that prices in Swedish grocery stores had risen by 19.1 percent over two years.

The rising prices have sparked a viral online campaign calling for a boycott of Sweden’s main grocery chains this week in a bid to get them to lower prices.

In Skarholmen, a neighbourhood in southwestern Stockholm, residents told AFP they were struggling to make ends meet.

Here, open air markets and small independent grocers offer Eastern or African specialities at competitive prices for consumers looking to avoid the big chains.

Every day the prices increase, by maybe five kronor ($0.50) for a carton of milk. The other day, I was going to buy nuts and it was very shocking: 350 kronor ($35) a kilo,” said Hayedeh, a 79-year-old pensioner.

Dairy products are among those with the highest increases. The price of butter has gone up 26 percent in a year, while milk and cheese have also risen, according to the statistics agency.

Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson and Rural Affairs Minister Peter Kullgren will meet the main supermarket chains ICA, Coop and Axfood on Thursday to “listen to the industry’s assessment of the situation and work together to lower prices for customers,” according to the government.

The main chains account for 90 percent of Sweden’s grocery store market.

Consumers have had to pay more for many food products than what is justified by the increase in cost for the components in food production,” said then head of the Swedish Competition Authority Rikard Jermsten in a report last year.

This situation would not have happened if there had been healthy competition,” he said.

Food industry actors have insisted the increases are due to factors out of their control, including the Covid pandemic, the war in Ukraine and inflation.

Bogdan Skorzynski, a 37-year-old painting business employee, said he quit smoking in order to be able to continue buying the same food items.

It’s a good thing for me”, but “prices have risen enormously and my salary has stayed the same”.

It’s not okay.”

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    2 days ago

    The main thing that people are pissed off about is that store owners in the ICA supermarket chain have continuously argued that they are doing what they can to combat high food prices, while at the same time awarding themselves record bonuses.

    • 1984@lemmy.today
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      2 days ago

      Of course they argue that but why would they decrease their profits?

      Ica is like a monopoly in Sweden, with their own food brands even, in almost all categories of food. And they push their own brands by shelf placing and by being out of competitor brands intentionally.

      A couple of people refusing to shop at ica will not help. Only government regulation can help against monopoly strategies.

        • 1984@lemmy.today
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          2 days ago

          You could just ask chat gpt to understand why. :)

          I asked it “Compare ica with other food sellers in sweden and explain why ica is close to a monopoly” and got a long response I cant post here, because it wont keep formatting and stuff and will look horrible.

          But go ask it and you will see what I mean.

          • lime!@feddit.nu
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            2 days ago

            of course, why did i not just consult the lying machine instead of having a conversation with a human

            just as an exercise in media literacy, try changing your question to include a “not” and contrast the answers you get.