Discount grocer Aldi has conceded its ancient IT infrastructure has held it back from a better display of its cheaper price offerings, even as shoppers switch between supermarkets at an all-time high rate.
At the ACCC’s supermarket inquiry hearings in Canberra on Monday, Aldi managing director of national buying Jordan Lack admitted a “technical limitation” had made it more difficult for shoppers to compare prices of goods against major players Woolworths and Coles.
“We are going through an IT transformation which, at the point of completion, we will look at whether [displaying prices online is] possible,” Lack said.
“It’s really a technical limitation that we have at the moment as opposed to a desire not to publish them. Given the position we hold in the market as having the cheapest groceries, we would love for more customers to be able to see the price of those goods.”
The ACCC inquiry’s interim report found Australians are increasingly going online and using apps to compare prices between supermarkets.
Consumer advocate Choice has conducted two government-funded quarterly surveys that found both times Aldi was the cheapest supermarket, at $50.79, for a basket of 14 common household goods when compared with Coles, Woolworths and IGA.
While Aldi publishes a weekly catalogue that includes the prices of its Special Buys range and weekly specials, the prices of its full range are not available. Lack said the supermarket was working to resolve the matter and aimed to publish the full range of prices “in the next year”.
Shoppers have been travelling further and visiting as many as seven or eight retailers a week to save on groceries. In response, Coles has expanded its home-brand range to cater to the growing proportion of people trading down to more affordable alternatives. Meanwhile, Woolworths has signalled a hit to its first-half profits as customers bought more discounted items or traded down.