Shoppers have been reacting as more products in shops appear to be subject to increased security measures. Some items have even been removed from shelves to protect them from shoplifters.
Packs of luxury butter Lurpak have had security tags added to them in Asda as the price increased to £6 per 750g tub. While shoppers have also expressed shock at finding baby milk in security boxes.
Security tags have been wrapped around formula milk powder as well as cheese and meat. These tags are usually on high-value items such as razors, aftershave and alcohol.
The devices, which set off an alarm at a shop's exit when anyone tries to remove the item without paying appear to be increasing in shops and supermarkets. Manchester Evening News reports. Shoppers have seen rising prices of groceries as their incomes have been squeezed by rocketing inflation.
In one branch of Boots, in Edgeley, Stockport, the Manchester Evening News found all the large containers of formula milk had been taken off the shelves. They have been replaced with cardboard cut-outs showcasing the different products available with customers having to ask for the products, which are kept in the stock room, at the till.
One staff member said they were 'prime' items that 'get stolen if they are left out.' The measure had been taken 'years ago' they added. In a Co-op branch on High Street in the city centre the formula tins were locked in plastic security boxes which again have to be opened at the till.
In similar scenes at the Tesco Express stores on Market Street and Piccadilly Gardens, and the big Tesco Extra store near Portwood roundabout in Stockport, alarmed tags had been wrapped around all brands of formula. And, in the Asda store in Stockport town centre yellow security stickers, which also activate the alarms, had been slapped on many of the major brands.
One unnamed shopper said: "It's a big baffling really. There is loads of stuff you expect to see tags on and other measures like that but baby milk isn't really one of them. It's quite sad when you think about it."
It follows one shocked dad-of-one from Kent speaking out after discovering tags on baby milk in his local Sainsburys store. He told the Mirror: "I was shocked to see security tags on our baby formula. I thought those sort of things were reserved for big-ticket items.
"It just shows how much the cost of living crisis is biting when items like this are being stolen on a regular basis."
However, one supermarket source said it would be wrong to suggest the move was connected to the cost of living as the measures were introduced in most stores before the pandemic. Another said the larger formula tins, which retail for between £10 and £15, had always been considered a 'high-value item' alongside expensive meats and alcohol.
Charlie Bennett wrote on twitter about the price of Lurpak: "Britain in 2022… Lurpak butter is at £6 a tub in ASDA and even has a security tag on it."
Also on the subject of Lurpak, Darryl Godden said: "I’m going to give up work and become a Lurpak trader." Another shopper said: "Me and another woman in Asda just been stood gawping at this! A fiver for a pack of lurpak??!!!"
Tesco and Asda declined to comment.
A Boots spokeswoman said: "Our Castle Street store has unfortunately been a target of theft for a while, which is why some items have been removed from the shop floor to help prevent them from being stolen. Store colleagues created this solution to protect stock and ensure there is always some available for those customers wishing to buy it. We take any attempt at theft extremely seriously, and we have a zero-tolerance approach to it in our stores."
A spokesperson for Co-op, confirmed: “Co-op has been involved in a small scale trial of new packaging for higher-value products such as meat for several years, with the additional security providing a further deterrent if a store locally experiences shoplifting issues.
"The move formed part of our Safer Colleagues campaign which has also succeeded in bringing in stricter sentences for violent incidents against shopworkers.”
It is understood the decision to place baby milk into a security case was taken by the local store.