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Growers criticise UK supermarkets for heavy Easter discounts on vegetables

Supermarkets have been criticised for using vegetables as the latest weapon in their burgeoning price war, charging as little as 8p for a 2kg bag of potatoes in an attempt to lure shoppers over Easter.Growers said they feared the massive discounts, which are also deployed at Christmas, could permanently devalue their produce.Asda and Aldi are charging 8p for a 2kg bag of potatoes and Tesco and Sainsbury’s are charging 15p for loyalty card holders, compared with normal prices of about £1.35 or as much as £2.50 for branded Albert Bartlett spuds

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Dark chocolate Toblerone to be discontinued in UK due to ‘changing tastes’

Mars Delight, Cadbury Dream and Rowntree’s Texan are just some of the once beloved chocolate bars that have been discontinued over the years, and now after almost six decades the dark chocolate Toblerone is joining them in the confectionery graveyard.The triangular-shaped almond-and-honey-laced chocolate bar is a staple of supermarkets and airport duty-free shopping, but will be discontinued in the UK.A spokesperson for Mondelēz, the company that produces Toblerone, said it made the “difficult decision” to discontinue its 360g dark chocolate bar because of “changing tastes”.“While we understand that this may be disappointing for some consumers, we continue to invest in Toblerone,” they added. They did not say whether the product would be discontinued outside the UK

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Ofgem boss calls for truce in row over electricity market overhaul

The head of Britain’s energy regulator has called for an industry truce in the deepening row over plans to overhaul the electricity market.A decision on whether to replace the country’s single electricity market with several market zones, each with their own price, is expected within weeks.It could mean that homes in areas where there is an abundance of electricity generation will pay lower prices than those in areas of high demand and low generation capacity.But as the decision – to be taken by the energy secretary, Ed Miliband – approaches, energy organisations have ratcheted up their opposing campaigns in what sources have described as one of the energy industry’s “ugliest” drives in years to pile pressure on the government.The campaigns have included contradictory paid-for research by third-party consultants, opinion surveys and coordinated open letters to government departments in the hopes of swaying the debate

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British food and drink industry call on EU to ‘reset’ trade ties

More than a dozen of Britain’s biggest retailers and food producers, including Marks & Spencer, J Sainsbury and Asda, have called on the EU to reduce checks on food and drink crossing the Channel and Irish Sea, which they say are costing billions of pounds.Ahead of a summit on 19 May that is hoped to “reset” trade ties five years on from Brexit, they are urging politicians to hammer out a deal on sanitary and phytosanitary checks. They hope this would include a veterinary agreement and would harmonise food safety rules or recognise them as equivalent.In a letter to Maroš Šefčovič, the EU commissioner for trade and economic security, the 13 companies said “unnecessary red tape” since Brexit had added £2bn to costs. Signatories of the letter, seen by the Guardian, include Morrisons, Lidl, Ocado, the sandwich makers Greencore and Samworth Brothers, as well as the meat processors Cranswick and 2 Sisters

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As Labour frustration grows, could OBR forecasts be cut to once a year?

When Labour was riding high in opposition, the Office for Budget Responsibility was a near sacrosanct institution. Its manifesto pledged Labour would “never sideline the OBR for political convenience”.But emerging from a punishing spring statement, inside No 10 the former devotees have turned sceptics. The fiscal rules remain untouchable – despite Labour MPs’ grumbles – but there is intense frustration at the institution that marks the government’s homework.That unhappiness is likely to deepen in June when MPs vote on a £4

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ECB cuts rates for third time this year as Europe braces for Trump tariffs

The cost of borrowing has fallen across the 20-member euro area for the third time this year after the European Central Bank cut its main interest rate to 2.25% in response to slowing growth and Donald Trump’s tariffs.The Frankfurt-based bank cut its benchmark deposit rate by a quarter of a percentage point on Thursday, in line with economist expectations, to tackle a slowdown in the bloc and the impact from the border taxes imposed earlier this month on all EU imports into the US.The ECB president, Christine Lagarde, said US tariffs on EU goods, which had increased from an average of 3% to 13%, were already harming the outlook for the European economy.“The major escalation in global trade tensions and the associated uncertainty will likely lower euro area growth by dampening exports,” she said, adding that they may “drag down investment and consumption”