Female hands using a mobile phone barcode reader to scan for information about products in a supermarket.
QR supermarket price revolution: Will new label rules slash your shopping bill?
Credit: Shutterstock, jittawit21
In a bid to tackle sky-high supermarket prices, politicians are championing a radical plan to scrap the requirement for product labels to be in Dutch. The controversial move could soon see groceries labelled in English, German, or French, complete with quick-response (QR) codes offering all the essential details in whichever language shoppers prefer. Could this change be embraced in other European countries like Spain?
Higher prices than neighbours
While shoppers in the Netherlands watch grocery bills soar, their neighbours in Germany and Belgium often pay less for the same products. Frustrated MPs have now come together to find a fix. But it hasn’t exactly been plain sailing: although all parties agree something must be done, how best to do it is a point of heated debate.
The PVDAGroenLinks party, led by Jesse Klaver, believes the solution is right under their noses – hidden in plain sight of European regulations. Klaver has proposed an amendment to the Warenwet (Dutch Food and Commodities Act) to allow labels in languages other than Dutch. He argues the current rules are stricter than necessary and says that a multilingual approach – plus a nifty QR code – could take a small margin off consumers’ weekly shopping total.
QR codes to the rescue
The plan has found favour with the VVD party and the Minister of Economic Affairs, Dirk Beljaarts, who share Klaver’s optimism for an information-packed QR code system. In theory, suppliers could print one label for several countries, cutting packaging costs and, hopefully, slashing shop prices.
Some in the sector are also backing the QR code idea, suggesting it could streamline labelling and help rein in supermarket margins. For those worried about understanding labels, Klaver insists English, German, and French are widely known in the Netherlands, plus each QR code would open a gateway to Dutch-language details on a website.
Will the Netherlands see cheaper weekly shops as a result of this labelling shake-up, or could more drastic measures be needed to bring prices down? With MPs from different parties rallying around their own agendas, Dutch grocery bills have never been under such intense scrutiny. Could this be the way forward across Europe as well? Watch this space.
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