Victory Against Pester Power! Lidl Removes Sweets From Supermarket Checkouts

Victory Against Pester Power! Lidl Removes Sweets From Supermarket Checkouts
|
Open Image Modal
AFP/Getty Images
German discount supermarket chain Lidl

In a move that will have grateful parents cheering in the aisles, discount supermarket chain Lidl has banned sweets from its checkout counters.

At last, a victory in the battle against the dreaded Pester Power!

The supermarket said it had responded to parents' concerns about the damage done by eating too many sweets and the constant struggle to get children to eat more healthily.

Now the supermarket is to ditch the tempting candy from its checkout areas and replace them with healthy snacks.

According to the supermarket's figures, 52 per cent of parents found it hard to get their children to eat healthily because of the amount of sweets and chocolate at checkouts.

And on top of the nutritional concerns, the cost of buying children snacks at the checkout counter has mounted, with 15 per cent of parents saying they spend around £20 to £40 on supermarket snacks.

Lidl said it had now launched a Healthy Checkouts initiative, which will see sweets and chocolates replaced with healthy alternatives at all of Lidl's 600 stores from this month.

This follows Lidl's successful trial in December, which saw a 20 per cent increase in shoppers.

Customer research found that seven out of 10 would pick a sweet-free checkout over a traditional one.

Lidl's move is likely to place pressure on other supermarkets to follow its lead after the National Obesity Forum warned that the UK is in danger of surpassing predictions that 50 per cent of the population would be obese by 2050.

Lidl UK managing director Ronny Gottschlich said: "We're the first supermarket to take such a bold step. We're committed not only to raising awareness of the importance of balanced diets and healthy lifestyles, but also to making it easier for our customers to follow them.

"We know how difficult it can be to say no to pester power, so by removing sweets and chocolates from our tills we can make it easier for parents to reward children in healthier ways.

"Parents are in favour of healthier checkouts and with six in 10 households visiting Lidl at least once in the last year and five million customers a week coming through our doors, it's important for us to meet their needs and concerns."

Malcolm Clark, co-ordinator of the Children's Food Campaign, which has been calling for junk free checkouts, said: "We congratulate Lidl for making this move and leading the way on removing unhealthy snacks from checkouts.

"The onus is now on other supermarkets and retailers to follow suit; and we and the British Dietetic Association will keep up the pressure for them to do so."