Consumer experts have urged Australian retailers to follow in the footsteps of British supermarket Tesco after the chain announced it would reduce the price of its basic women’s razors to match that of its identical men’s razors.
Britain’s biggest supermarket chain came under fire when it was revealed that it was charging twice as much for the pink version of the product.
Tesco was selling its pink disposable twin-blade razors for 20 pence (35 cents), while the blue men’s product — identical except for the colour — was only 10 pence (17 cents).
Media spokeswoman for consumer group Choice, Kate Browne, said the “pink tax” was also a problem in Australia.
“While market segmentation is a reality in the market and has been for a long time, we would certainly like to see price parity between identical products despite the market they are being aimed at,” she told the ABC.
Ms Browne said across-the-board market segmentation, which involves marketers appealing to a narrow range of consumers in order to sell multiple versions of the same product, was part of the problem.
“We see this across a range of products from personal care products, men’s deodorant versus women’s deodorant … and children’s toys where we often see a girl’s and a boy’s version of the same product,” she said.
She said this was “a clever way” to sell more of the same product as well as “training little kids to think of products as being gendered as they grow up”.
‘Female’ products 37 per cent more expensive
Tesco’s razors were singled out in a 2016 investigation by The Times, which found that products aimed at women and girls cost, on average, 37 per cent more than almost identical products for men.
Other brands named in the investigation included Levi’s, Amazon and Boots — who succumbed to pressure to cut the prices of some of their women’s products following an online campaign.