While we hear the same arguments from the gas industry as to why they can’t pay tax, here is some of the other excuses given by large corporations in why they charge as they do. As AAP reports:
Guardrails to avoid “gaming” of supermarket item prices were altered in response to surging inflation, a Woolworths executive has told the Federal Court.
The competition watchdog claims Woolies and Coles temporarily hiked prices before reducing them to disguise increases through their “Prices Down” and “Down Down” marketing campaigns.
Minimum time limits to avoid gaming of prices had been established during a low-inflation period but had to be reduced as the COVID pandemic drove widespread inflation, Woolworths chief commercial officer Paul Harker said.
“The guidance that we have is not very particular, other than saying you needed to hold a price for a reasonable period of time and sell reasonable quantities,” he told the hearing in Sydney.
“Our determination of what is reasonable is in the price trust policy that was rolled out to the team, (and) as inflation continued to grow and grow and grow, we revised these policies.”
Gaming refers to using market mechanisms, pricing or supply levels to artificially inflate prices or gain an unfair advantage over competitors.
Mr Harker said the supermarket giant had initially set established price periods and resting periods – which prevented products from returning to the campaign for at least six months after being removed – to avoid gaming of prices by suppliers.
“It was to make sure the category manager and the supplier, in putting the product onto the program, were committed to what it was actually trying to achieve and it would be there for as reasonably as long as possible,” he said.
“These rules were in a low inflation environment, and were designed to make a long term commitment to the program by making it difficult to take the product off the program.”
An initial minimum establishment price period of eight to 12 weeks became “onerous” on Woolworths’ teams and was later changed to a period of three to six weeks, the executive said.
Coles offered its defence in the joint case brought by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission in February in a 10-session hearing, but the court’s final judgment will be withheld until each supermarket giant’s case is heard.
Mr Harker, who has been with Woolworths since 1993, noted Coles was using a similar price promotion when Woolworths launched “Prices Down”.
“Certainly, our competitor was doing something similar,” he said.
“We had already attempted a few years before that with a shelf prices reduced campaign across the store; it didn’t resonate.”
On Monday, ACCC lawyers accused Woolworths of employing “subtle magic” in its pricing campaign to disguise price hikes with outsized, short-term increases before reducing them to above the original shelf price.
The commission argues the supermarkets offered certain products at a regular price for at least 180 days, hiked their price by at least 15 per cent for a “relatively short period of time”, before reducing them to above the original shelf price alongside “Prices Dropped” or “Down Down” tags.
The case would hinge on the duration of the temporary price hike and what is considered a “reasonable” period.
“If the price establishment period was three months, we wouldn’t be here,” Justice Michael O’Bryan told the court on Monday.
“If it was always one week, the case might not be fought.
“We’re somewhere in the middle and that’s what makes this case rather difficult.”
The ACCC alleges the conduct involved 266 products at Woolies and 245 goods at Coles at different times between late 2021 and mid-2023, impacting tens of millions of sales and deriving significant revenue for the grocery giants.
The basket was whittled down to 12 agreed items to be scrutinised in court, including a Tim Tams Family pack, Carman’s classic fruit and nut muesli bars and Sakata rice crackers.
Comments (18)
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Andrew
Wed, 22.04.26
16.37 AEST
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Richard
Wed, 22.04.26
15.19 AEST
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
14.47 AEST
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Sam
Wed, 22.04.26
14.47 AEST
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Cath
Wed, 22.04.26
13.40 AEST
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
12.58 AEST
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
12.52 AEST
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
12.35 AEST
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
12.28 AEST
Factcheck: Regional jobs in the gas industry Greg Jericho The QRC and Susan McDonald have been talking up how the gas industry ahs been an absolutely boom for jobs the regions Alas... The Point Live
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
12.12 AEST
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Kylie V
Wed, 22.04.26
12.06 AEST
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Luke
Wed, 22.04.26
11.41 AEST
Is 55 bigger or smaller than 58? Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young asks the QRC CEO why her arguments are the same as previous arguments - when they argued any revenue changes would... The Point Live
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Cath
Wed, 22.04.26
11.27 AEST
‘We should thank the gas industry for paying people’s wages’ David Pocock: You said earlier in response to question that companies pay a lot of corporate tax and that Australians get a return when prices... The Point Live
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Angelika Heurich
Wed, 22.04.26
10.33 AEST

@rowecartoon.bsky.social stairs Bluesky Social
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Richard
Wed, 22.04.26
10.26 AEST
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Tony
Wed, 22.04.26
09.50 AEST
Albanese on fuel Anthony Albanese has called in to ABC radio Sydney where he is talking about what he has done to secure fuel - including working with... The Point Live
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Andrew Faith
Wed, 22.04.26
08.47 AEST
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Amy Remeikis
Wed, 22.04.26
09.24 AEST
Join the conversation
Not turning up to a gas tax review without any disaggregated data on the gas tax you are reviewing is ballsy move by ATO/Treasury. It's almost like them don't care.
Are there not punitive measures that may be imposed for lying to Parliament? Surely there is scope for these to extend to 'deliberately misleading' Parliament?
e.g. Conoco saying: 'well, we pay tax because we pay APLNG tax" - so damn what? If APLNG is in fact paying tax then APLNG must be making a PROFIT (duh) - unless APLNG is paying CONOCO tax liabilities out of the goodness of their little hearts (bless them!)
We need high-profile, major Parliamentary exposure of every lie / misleadng claim / obfuscation / attempt at diversion away from facts. We need it to be shouted loudly enough so that even Newscorpse, Channel 9, Seven Media etc. cannot simply cherry-pick some outrageous fauxfacts and trumpet them as headlines without a genuinely stinging penalty.
Senator Smith from WA also seems to be leading the witness from Origin regarding the gas review, an interesting point to is all witnesses today have figures that support their points but none have figures on profits or spends on advertising ect
It's hard to know how to assess these changes without knowledge of what the other supports are. If it was actually about getting the appropriate supports to people with disability/the disabled that's what the speech would have been about. Instead it's focus was on slashing on paper costs.
Guess what's expensive but not on a federal budget - people stuck in state hospitals because the federal government hasn't provided the appropriate supports for aged care. I don't know enough about disability supports but I suspect it's similar.
When Senator Smith interrupted to mention government spending I did think he was leading the witness (I have possibly watched too many courtroom dramas). My immediate response to his question was profits, I've been paying attention Greg :D
Bran Black just said more untaxed gas will raise our living standards, what metric is he using to assert this? Propagandist of GAS industry.
Susan McDonald jumps in again to support business council, her questions to him look like they planned it beforehand, hmm I’m sure they didn’t.
Business council holding their usual line of supporting GAS - not surprised, using GAS talking points how original.
Same pattern as NT - boom, jobs during construction, then sharp drop, they pay no tax, pollute the environment, and control narrative through the media and government who they fund.
“Salient facts” yep sure, thanks, how about you pay us what you owe!
This She’ll rep acting like she doesn’t know the numbers is infuriating, and watching McDonald run cover for her is even more infuriating
I think SHY is being a little fast with the numbers. Coal volume is down. Number of mines changes but volume is what we actually make money on.
I don’t think that’s a good enough reason to give the natural resources away for free though. I fully support increasing taxes on the export of our natural industries.
Just doesn’t need to pretend like there is no cost. I just think Australians are prepared to have less coal exports to have more tax revenue and fund services.
I was worried about how today would go, however a few more comments like this might encourage more people to be in support of the 25% export tax.
Morning Amy and The Point Team
I'll try to comment again, as it seems my previous attempt didn't work...
In light of the upcoming talk at the NPC on the NDIS by Butler, thought this Rowe cartoon was very apt.
Thanks to you all for keeping us informed... and hope it's not too much of a slog.
To:> @ theactualAlbo.aph
cc> Chalmers, Jim, Gallagher, Katy, Laborcabinet
re: Gas Tax.
If you do NOT raise the gas tax by 25%, Australians will know that you value your campaign contributions above the welfare of your electorate.
And we will NOT forget. Thank you for acting on this message.
Yet again the words “… illegal and immoral invasion of Ukraine…” roll so easily off the tongue, while the same words as applied to attacks on Gaza, Lebanon, Iran, Syria, Iraq, Yemen and Qatar seem to get stuck in his throat. Possibly caused by his vision problem… of the moral kind.
A surprise two days of Amy - that has improved my week markedly.
Can't wait for budget week!*
*Why yes, I am a masochist.
I can wait for budget week, but at the same time, will not be able to switch off it for a moment.