@allgeier @kattascha Zumindest die, die noch eine Apotheke haben. #WelcomeToCapitalism

@rbreich
In Australia, the food industry also exhibits significant levels of concentration, though perhaps not as extreme as in the U.S.

Here's a general overview:

1. Supermarket Sector:
The Australian grocery market is highly concentrated, with two major players, #Woolworths and #Coles, dominating about 65-70% of the market. Aldi and IGA (Independent Grocers of Australia) hold smaller shares, but the landscape is still largely controlled by the #duopoly of Woolworths and Coles. This concentration can limit competition and contribute to higher prices for consumers.

2. Meat Processing:
The Australian meat processing industry is also fairly concentrated, with a few large companies like JBS Australia, Teys Australia, and Australian Country Choice controlling a significant share of #beef processing. This concentration can lead to less competition and potentially higher prices for meat products.

3. #Agricultural Inputs (Seeds, Fertilisers):
The agricultural inputs sector in Australia, like seeds and fertilisers, is controlled by a few major players. Companies such as Bayer (which acquired #Monsanto) have a significant share of the seed market, while companies like Incitec Pivot and Nutrien dominate fertiliser production. This concentration can lead to reduced competition and potentially higher costs for #farmers, which may be passed on to consumers.

4 #Dairy Industry:
The dairy processing industry in Australia is also dominated by a few large companies like #Fonterra, #Saputo, and Bega Cheese. This concentration can impact #milk prices both for producers and consumers.

In summary, Australia has similar issues with market concentration in the food industry, though the levels vary by sector. This concentration can lead to reduced competition, which often results in higher prices for consumers. The dominance of a few major players across various sectors makes it challenging to achieve more competitive pricing, ultimately affecting the cost of food in Australia.

#FoodIndustry #MarketConcentration #Australia #GroceryPrices #FoodSecurity #CostOfLiving #SupermarketDuopoly #Agriculture #FoodPrices #EconomicImpact #DairyIndustry #BeefProcessing #FertiliserPrices #ConsumerRights #WelcomeToCapitalism #Auspol

@ChrisMayLA6 outsourcing it to private corporations with the most insane cost structures.
Major Sydney roads and highways are given to private companies to build with the right to charge tolls.
In one instance, the company that built the eastern distributor broke even 5 years after its completion and is now just maintaining it. Cleaning, replacing burst lights, managing road-base.
I forget the details, but they can continue to collect the toll almost in perpetuity. The govt has therefore no expense to show on the balance sheet, and motorists are paying for the very handsome salaries of the execs of the company that built the thing. Those are cumulative costs. Over the course of its lifespan, the tolls will cover the cost of building many times over.
Last time I travelled through it, it looked like the walls were dark grey, though I know they are clad in a sand coloured veneer of sorts.
Neoconservatism that wants the govt to do little, is costing tax payers and in this instance road users very much more than it would have cost if the govt had built it (like they used to, until some greedy cunt came up with that plan).
There is almost no transit route or highway through and around Sydney that is not owned by private equity.
On one instance they are collecting $28 from each truck that uses the North Connex tunnel. Since it has been opened, it's been illegal for trucks to use the surface road.
Illegal.
Cars and motorcycles have that choice still. If they use the tunnel they pay just under $10.
The tunnel is 9km long (just over 5 miles).
There is almost no goods transport via rail in and around Sydney. It's all on trucks.
28 bucks each trip for 10 km of the only way (there is no other) of carting goods from the northern parts of the metropolitan area into the city and beyond.
#WelcomeToCapitalism

People tend to describe me as overly optimistic and naive... but there are people out there asking how come if they work really hard they could still be laid off? Come on peeps... life is a cabaret. A company can't see you as a human being... life doesn't work like that.

How do you work knowing that your work might not be recognized? I don't know it happens all the time and work still gets done #welcometocapitalism