As food prices continue to go up, a new Statistics Canada report shows that consumers are changing their grocery shopping habits for lower-cost options.
Loblaw on Wednesday beat Wall Street expectations for second-quarter revenue and profit, helped by sustained demand for groceries and drugs and higher prices.
As food prices continue to go up, a new Statistics Canada report shows that consumers are changing their grocery shopping habits for lower-cost options.
After the Competition Bureau found grocers had increased their profits by 50 per cent during a period when inflation rose to a 40-year high, New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh called for a windfall tax on the grocery sector.