Thank you very much, Mr. Chair, and members of the committee.
Food price inflation has slowed down in recent months, and this is a very positive development, but it remains higher than overall inflation. Food prices increased by 5.6% in the 12 months ending in October, compared to general inflation of 3.1%.
In my judgment, an increase in profits collected at the retail stage of the food supply chain has made a measurable and sustained contribution to those continued high food prices. Supermarkets did not cause the outbreak of inflation that followed the COVID pandemic, but they did make it worse.
I have prepared a submission, which I believe has been distributed to the committee, with updated data regarding prices and profits in the food retail sector in Canada. Let me briefly summarize the main findings.
Based on profits realized in the first nine months of this year, net income in the food retail sector will likely exceed $6 billion for 2023. That's up 8% from 2022 and sets a new all-time record.
Food retailers are now earning more than twice as much profit as they did before the COVID pandemic.
Basic mathematics refutes the claim that you have heard from supermarket CEOs that they have merely been passing on higher input costs to consumers. An industry cannot double its profits if it's merely passing on higher expenses.
Measured as a share of total revenue, the net income margin of food retailers also remains elevated. The sector-wide profit margin was 3.3% of total revenue in the first nine months of 2023, again more than twice as wide as it was in 2019. This profit margin is widely misunderstood in popular discussions about food retailing.
Supermarket CEOs often describe food retail as a low-margin business because final profits are a small percentage of total revenue. This does not mean that food retail is not a very profitable industry, however. The margin merely reflects the fundamental input/output structure of any business.
Food retailers generally do not process or manufacture the products they sell. They simply buy them from suppliers, add a mark-up and sell them to consumers. Their business expenses are limited to functions directly related to the stores they operate. It is thus natural that profit margins relative to total costs, including the costs of those already-made products, seem low.
In contrast, profit margins for other industries that undertake more complex and vertically integrated functions like product development and manufacturing tend to be higher as a proportion of sales.
Businesses, when they are investing capital, evaluate investment opportunities not according to which industry offers the widest sales margin but rather the greatest return on invested capital, and since grocery stores are not a capital or technology-intensive undertaking, profits relative to the scale of capital invested in those stores can be quite significant.
For example, in its latest financial report covering the first three-quarters of 2023, George Weston Limited reported a net income of about $2.7 billion over nine months, up 12% from the similar period a year ago. That may seem small relative to overall revenues, but it's large compared with the invested equity base in the company, which was $13.7 billion at the close of that period. That implies an annualized return on equity over the first nine months of 2023 of 26.4%, so that is a very strong rate of profit by any definition. The idea that grocery stores are a low-margin business is quite misleading.
The sustained record profits in food retail contrast with profit trends elsewhere in the economy. We have seen a decline in overall profits in 2023, which rose substantially right after the pandemic but have moderated since. The same goes, interestingly, for the food processing sector, which also enjoyed strong profits initially after the pandemic that have moderated since.
Finally, I would like to address the suggestions made by some observers that high food prices are caused by Canada's federal-provincial carbon pricing system.
There is no correlation in either historic data or international comparisons between carbon pricing and food inflation. In Canada, food price inflation was higher in years when increases in the national carbon price, which was phased in beginning in 2018, were smaller, so statistically there's actually a negative correlation between changes in the carbon price and food inflation. U.S. food prices grew faster than in Canada on a cumulative basis since the pandemic, even though the U.S. has no carbon pricing system.
I'll leave it at that. Thank you, again, and I look forward to the questions.