The North South issue is a bit of a soap box rant for me
.
Firstly I have a very negative view of the Irish retail sector. I'm tired of hearing that Wages, services and rates contribute to what can only be called extreme price differences between the north and the south. Sure Wages and the such are more expensive but even if all those things were 50% dearer down here (which by the way I don't think they are by that much) that would not necessarily mean that stuff should cost 50% (or 1/3) more down here(which by average it does). And believe you me I have seen differences of 100% (or double). And even adding the difference of 6% vat should not show such a gulf between prices.
However let me say that I do not believe it is the cold face of the retail sector that are to blame and I do feel sorry for the retail sector. I know a good few people who have certain retail outlets and they despair about prices before they even get the item for the wholesale price in Ireland. The issue, in a lot of cases, is they cannot buy items at wholesale for less than these items are actually for sale at retail outlets in the north which is ludicrous.
That to me shows that there is something really rotten in the Irish system and they are too many people along the line looking for too high profits. Distributors and wholesalers all in my opinion contribute gravely to the problem. Manufacturers and distributors seem to have an Irish & a UK price which are quite apart and we have been ripped off. Some of the biggest offenders have been the Supermarkets and abusing the week sterling to make extra profit on dim Irish customers. Taake for example a simple tooth brush ... I know of a particular instance where Johnson & Johnson sell it to wholesale for 79Cent but by the time it gets to the supermarket shelf it is 3.69 how can that be justified and that is not an isolated case.
However the message just does not seem to get through ... Firstly people are not complaining enough and taking appropriate action which is the usual Irish reaction ... complain but do nothing about it so what's the point. It is only by voting with your feet that you will get your message across. Secondly the retail sector appear to be slow to take their suppliers to task also. They have seen their turn around drop considerably so they need to react but did not. And this is what got us into this stale mate of over inflated prices in the first place and now people suddenly realised that they do not have the money any more.
This time last year I actually encouraged people to shop up north because if you don't send a message nothing will change and that is one big point about shopping up north. Secondly the savings
are unbelievable. We went up in October and stayed for 2 nights which cost us €200 including evening meals, spent €60 on petrol and €70 on sundries (lunches etc) Now strangely I only bought only one bottle of Whiskey but we bought some Wine and beer as well as grocery and children's gear. And even though we made a few days out of it and even deducting that outlay from our total savings we still managed to save over 300Euro compared to Irish prices. Now that to me shows how wrong Irish prices are.
However I will say these last few months have seen big falls in the price of grocery and drink but it is all in special offers. It is a start but it needs to be permanent and the Budget hopefully will help also.
So until all the waffle stops and
all sectors get a reality check and weigh into the problem, I'll continue shopping up north as to me that is the only way to fight the horror of overpriced goods. We all have less to spend so the distributors and wholesalers need to anti up too.
Sorry rant over ... phew ...