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Canada’s Competition Bureau Targets Food Industry Oligopoly

Canada’s antitrust watchdog has opened a formal investigation into the country’s food-supply chain, scrutinizing everything from production and transportation to retail pricing. The move follows Prime Minister Mark Carney’s recent critique of a market landscape dominated by five major grocers that stifle competition and inflate costs for independent retailers.

Canada’s Competition Bureau Targets Food Industry Oligopoly

The Competition Bureau plans to spend the coming year analyzing how industry concentration impacts prices for meat, produce, and household staples. A comprehensive report is expected by the spring of 2027, detailing specific legislative recommendations to dismantle barriers for smaller players. This inquiry aligns with Carney’s broader food-security strategy, which seeks to expand commercial food hubs and boost independent grocer participation by 15% through improved terminal access.

Previous efforts to diversify the sector have stalled. A 2023 bureau report identified intense industry concentration as a primary driver of rising consumer prices, yet attempts to attract foreign grocery chains—including major international players—failed to gain traction. Analysts note that the sheer geographic scale of Canada, the second-largest country by landmass, creates significant logistical hurdles for new entrants attempting to challenge entrenched giants like Loblaw, Metro, and Sobeys.

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