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Supermarkets offer confusing price 'discounts'

As much as traders doubt the practicality of guidelines over price tags to stop retailers from faking bargains, a stroll through the city's supermarkets shows the status quo can confuse if not mislead shoppers.

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Those crackers may not be such a bargain. Photo: Jonathan Wong

As much as traders doubt the practicality of guidelines over price tags to stop retailers from faking bargains, a stroll through the city's supermarkets shows the status quo can confuse if not mislead shoppers.

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There are usually two prices stated on supermarkets' price labels - the "original" price for reference and the "special" or discounted price.

But there is nothing to prevent the store from boosting the "original" price so that a few days later, the "discounted" one makes the item look like a bargain.

The visited outlets of ParknShop and Wellcome in Quarry Bay on a Wednesday and a Friday, tracking the price changes of eight common products. For three items, the price on Friday was labelled attractively as a "special price", but it was not any lower than that on Wednesday.

On Wednesday, both Wellcome and ParknShop gave a 225-gram package of Garden pop-pan spring onion crackers an original price of HK$13.7 and a price of HK$12.10 each if you bought two. Two days later, the chains increased the original price to HK$16.3 and the special price to HK$13.7.

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Most shoppers wouldn't know Friday's discount was equal to Wednesday's original price, and the bargain of HK$12.10 for two was no longer available.

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