Which? magazine is launching a 'super-complaint' with the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) on behalf of us customers. It claims that the supermarkets deliberately use different pricing schemes, make misleading, or not so special, special offers and reduce unit sizes without reducing the price.
It is about time this action was done and good luck to Which?. It has been going on for years and unless you are a savvy shopper or one with the time and, importantly, the ability to compare you are going to get fleeced.
Some of the things I see on a regular basis do my head in. "Special Offer" screams the pennant "2 for £3" - that's two 500g trays of x pre-wrapped with the special offer sticker; yet down the aisle the same 500g packs are £1.39 each. I also see things like the same product by different manufacturers, usually the own brand and market leader, where one is shown priced as £2.75 per 100g and the other at £23.75 per kg. When these are sold at the same unit price the buyer is getting less of one than the other. Then there are the packs of x number of, say, tomatoes or onions, prominently displayed. However, if you weigh them then go to the loose alternatives you can get the same weight for two thirds the price.
I am lucky. I have loads of time and can compare, but those not in my situation, and there are millions, are being robbed blind.