Honey, I shrunk the shopping…

23.10.2012 Not all tissues, paper towels or serviettes are the same, warns our consumer expert. Some are bigger, some come in bigger boxes, and some are thicker and more absorbent. Picture: Etienne Creux

23.10.2012 Not all tissues, paper towels or serviettes are the same, warns our consumer expert. Some are bigger, some come in bigger boxes, and some are thicker and more absorbent. Picture: Etienne Creux

Published Oct 25, 2012

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Pretoria - If you can’t be bothered to check out the small print on labels, you are laying yourself open to being ripped off at every turn.

The sad truth is that if manufacturers can get away with making products that are smaller and of poorer quality than those of their competitors, they will.

By doing so, their prices appear to undercut those of their competitors, and consumers who aren’t savvy or motivated enough to do proper comparison shopping, being guided only by price, choose these “cheaper” products in the mistaken belief that they’re getting a good deal.

I’ve devoted masses of column space to examples of downsizing and in some cases downgrading of products: a smaller bar of soap or bottle of tomato sauce; a shrunken bar of chocolate; less chicken in the pie.

And it’s happening in every supermarket aisle, not just the food and cosmetics ones.

Rajesh Ranjith recently queried whether the thickness of black rubbish bags, sold in packs in supermarkets, was regulated, because in his experience it varied.

Worse still, he said, many brands didn’t declare the micron count on their packaging, leaving consumers with no idea what the manufacturer meant by “heavy duty”.

“You only discover the inferior quality of some of these bags when you take out the trash and they rip,” Ranjith said.

Responding, Rory Murray, marketing manager of Tuffy Brands, said manufacturers were not required to state the thickness, in microns, on the packs, nor were the descriptions linked to regulated micron counts.

“The industry has sort of regulated itself into three bands – 18 microns for a budget bag, 22 microns for a standard bag, and 35 microns for heavy duty,” he said.

“Tuffy has taken the stance to hold our product offerings to these specifications, but not all brands are doing this.

“So Mr Ranjith is quite correct – consumers may well be faced with two rolls of 10 refuse bags, both stating ‘heavy duty’, but one will be 35 micron and the other 28.

“The 28 micron bag may well be cheaper, as less material is used in its manufacture, but the product is 20 percent thinner.”

Since March, all Tuffy products had carried a micron count on the packaging, Murray said, but given that plastic bags had an indefinite shelf life, much old stock – without a micron count – remained on sale.

“The upcoming SABS legislation requires the thickness to be stated on the outer packaging,” Murray said, “but this will only apply to products carrying the SABS endorsement.”

Right now, supermarket shelves carry a mix of refuse bag products that declare the micron count and some that don’t.

So, don’t just grab any old pack of refuse bags based on price – look carefully at the micron count, and if you’re into sparing the environment, choose one which uses as much recycled content as possible.

The same goes for tissues – some brands are packs of 200 and others of 180 or less, so check the number on the pack before you buy.

And not all paper towel sheets are the same size – there’s something else to check.

Reader Peter Lovejoy said he bought a triple pack of Pick n Pay brand paper towel earlier this month and later realised that the sheets were smaller than they were previously.

“The pack reads 260mm x 220mm – the sheets used to be 277mm x 230mm.”

And he’s convinced the quality has been reduced too.

I sought a response from Pick n Pay and was told by corporate brands general manager Cindy Jenks that the size change came about when the supplier of the PnP brand paper towels changed its machinery, “in order to utilise more efficient technology with better embossing and reduced wastage”.

“This is so disappointing,” Lovejoy said.

“No doubt we’ll be told it’s about keeping the product ‘affordable’ but I’d rather pay more for a better-quality product.”

Toilet rolls are regulated in terms of number of sheets, as well as the thickness and the size of each of those sheets, but, as previously reported in this column, recently the regulations were changed to allow, among other things, for two-ply rolls to come in either the traditional 350 sheets or just 200 sheets.

Those smaller “mini” packs sell for seemingly bargain prices, yet they are the most expensive option.

Beware.

Paper serviettes are also regulated. There’s an SABS standard which manufacturers are required to conform to in terms of size and thickness.

They should be 21g per square metre (gsm) and measure 30cm x 30cm when unfolded.

But I’ve just discovered that some manufacturers are ignoring that specification and making serviettes which are smaller and thinner than the standard, thereby undercutting the competition but providing unwitting consumers with an inferior product.

If you’ve got a pack of these plain serviettes at home, take out your ruler and measure – you may just find them to be about a centimetre short, all round, contrary to the measurements stated on the pack.

Let me know.

Are the supermarkets selling these non-complaint products aware that they are short-changing their customers?

I intend to find out.

Watch this space. - Pretoria News

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