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Amazon accused of price gouging on essential items in early days of pandemic

An American consumer advocacy group is accusing Amazon of price gouging on items such as soap, face masks and toilet paper in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, even as the e-commerce giant claimed to be cracking down on third-party sellers on itsplatform who were doing the same thing.

Company disputes claims by consumer advocacy group that some items were marked up by 1,000%

Disinfectant wipes were hard to come by in the early days of the pandemic, and if you could find them chances are the price was far higher than normal. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

An American consumer advocacy group is accusing Amazon of price gouging on items such as soap, face masks and toilet paper in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, even as the e-commerce giant claimed to be cracking down on third-party sellers on itsplatform who were doing the same thing.

A reportby Washington-based Public Citizen claims that Amazon hiked prices on many essential items in March and April, adding mark-ups of up to 1,000 per cent on some basic items.

"Amazon has fundamentally misled the public, law enforcement and policymakers about price increases during the pandemic," saidAlex Harman, the consumer policy advocate for the groupwhich says it lobbies lawmakers for legislative changes to protect consumers.

The group tracked a sample of items to monitor their price and availability. Among the price changes the group said it observed were:

  • A pack of 50 disposable face masks increased by 1,000 per cent.
  • Dial liquid antibacterial hand soap increased by 470 per cent.
  • A pack of 100 disposable hand gloves increased by 336 per cent.
  • A pack of eight 1,000-sheet toilet paper rolls increased by 528 per cent.
  • A pack of eight Brawny paper towels increased by 303 per cent.
  • A five-pound bag ofunbleached flour increased by 425 per cent.

In a statement to CBC News, Amazon strongly refutes the claims and says it is in favour of legislation that would forbid price gouging in all forms.

"There is no place for price gouging onAmazonand that includes products offered directly byAmazon," the company said Thursday. "Our systems are designed to offercustomers the best available online price and if we see an error, we work quickly to fix it."

Amazon has published blog posts in favour of establishing a nationwide law against price gouging, and another saying that it has "no placein our stores."

PPE in short supply

Items such as hand sanitizer, toilet paper, flour and other sudden essentials were hard to come by in March and April across the U.S. and Canada, as reports of massive price hikes and supply shortages were rampant.

CBC News reported at the time that Amazon's Canadian website was selling a small, 60-millilitre bottle of hand sanitizer for $184. Amazon blamed third-party sellers, and vowed to crack down on any similar instances.

But the Public Citizen report says Amazon was also hiking prices on many items at the time. "Amazon haspubliclyblamedthird-party sellers for price increases while continuing to raise prices on its own products and allowing those sellers to increase their prices," Harman said. "Amazon is not a victim in the price gouging on its marketplace it is a perpetrator."

Consumers had a hard time finding many essential items on store shelves in the early days of the pandemic. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

Basic supply and demand

Farla Efros, president of retail consultancy HRC Advisory, said in an interview with CBC News on Thursday that anyprice hikes for in-demand items just boil down to simple supply and demand issues.

"Given the fact they were able to servicetheir customers, Ithink that [consumers]will be forgiving," she said.

Efros added that prices went up elsewhere. "You saw the same thing in thegrocery stores," she said, noting high-profile examplesof retailers who were shamed in the media, including high-end Toronto grocery store Pusateri's, which at one point was selling sanitizing wipes for $30 a can.

And a couple in B.C. went viral for buying up the entire supply of sanitizing wipes at multiple Costcos in and around Vancouver and then reselling them at an exorbitant markup on Amazon, before Amazon banned them.

Efrossays consumers are mostly grateful to be able to get their hands on those items at all, which wasn't the case at most in-person stores. "Consumers were so desperate to get their hands on anything and everything that they didn'tpay as much attention as they would normally."

But another retail expert thinks Amazon may have taken a hit to its reputation with consumers. Doug Stephens, founder and CEO of The Retail Prophet, says the secret weapon in Amazon'sgrowth as a retailer is the trust that consumers have in itsprices and reliability.

"You felt pretty confidentthat you weren't going to be gouged, so something like this is really damaging," Stephens said in an interview. Coming on the heels of other revelations about labour violations and health concerns in warehouses, and a Competition Bureau probe into whether Amazon gives preferential treatment to its own products, Stephens says the company may have hurt itself a little in this pandemic, despite their booming sales.

"It takes a long time to build trust but it takes a little time to loseit," he said.

With files from the CBC's Meegan Read