IFA PRESIDENT MEETS ENTERPRISE MINISTER ON CODE OF PRACTICE FOR RETAILERS
Friday, 10 June 2011 15:37



IFA President John Bryan will this evening (Tues) meet Enterprise Minister
Richard Bruton to discuss plans for delivering a fair margin for primary
producers and curbing the power of the retail multiples. He said, “The
Minister must give a firm commitment that legislation contained in the
Programme for Government will be prioritised and implemented without further
delay. It was very disappointing to see the current legislative list did not
contain the Fair Trade Bill that Fine Gael promoted so vigorously in the
run-up to the recent General Election.”

John Bryan said, “IFA held a number of meetings with the facilitator John
Travers in 2010 and we were assured that progress was being made on the
introduction of a Code of Practice and the appointment of an Ombudsman. The
Minister has now received a report from John Travers and we expect him to
act quickly.”

The IFA President said he would be pressing Minister Bruton to prioritise
the legislation that would fix the food supply chain. “All farmers want is
to be able to cover their costs and make a living. The dominance of the
supermarkets is forcing farmers to sell below the cost of production, which
is not sustainable and is costing jobs. Without effective legislation and
strong enforcement, the inequity will remain.”

Mr Bryan said there was increasing focus at EU Commission level and in other
Member States on retail regulation. “There is now a growing recognition
among lawmakers in Europe of the need for robust legislation that will
ensure fair play for producers.”  For example, the UK Government has
introduced a Groceries Code Adjudicator Bill. The Bill seeks to establish an
adjudicator to monitor and enforce the Groceries Supply Code of Practice who
will be able to:
§ act as arbitrator in disputes between retailers and their direct
suppliers;
§ start investigations about potential breaches of the Code based on
complaints from suppliers and/or information in the public domain.
Concluding, John Bryan said, “All the political parties here accept the
imperative of a Code of Practice that will curb retailer dominance, and have
made commitments to deliver this. The Government must press ahead with their
proposals immediately.”