EDUCATION
Warning over shrinking school meals as prices rise The BBC published a stark warning that school caterers could be forced to serve smaller portions or use cheaper ingredients due to rising prices. This information came from a major food wholesaler. Andrew Selley, boss of Bidfood, said
caterers
would
face
“difficult decisions” as inflation soars. The warning comes after Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey said food price rises were a “major worry”. However, Marks & Spencer chairman said he expected the sharp rate at which prices were rising to be temporary. “I do think it’s important to say before we get too panicked, most of this inflation is probably transitory,” Archie Norman told the BBC’s Today programme. Food prices have surged in recent months as the pandemic and war in Ukraine have driven up the costs of energy, shipping and raw materials. Mr Norman said it “wouldn’t be surprising” see food price inflation over the course of the year “running towards 8 to 10%”. n 24 | Warwickshire Now | Issue 64 | June 2022
Bidfood’s Mr Selley said “all of the inputs into the food supply chain” had increased over the past nine months, putting pressure on the firm, which caters to organisations such as schools, hospitals and NHS trusts. “We are seeing things like sunflower oil is double the price it was a year ago, which has pushed into other oils like vegetable oil, rape seed oil, even palm oil. Bakery items are up 20-30%.” Mr Selley called on the government to ensure funding for free school meals kept pace with rising prices, saying they were “vital” for children’s “education and attainment”.
“Over the last 10 years the amount of money the government provides for free school meals has only gone up by 1.7%, which obviously was well behind inflation even before this last 12 months,” Mr Selley said. “We can see that is going to leave some difficult decisions for school caterers [in the months ahead]. Either they are going to potentially serve smaller portions or cheaper ingredients which isn’t going to be good for the children.” The government said it recognised the pressures some schools could face, adding it had “given them the autonomy to agree
A total of 1.7 million children currently qualify for free school meals in England.
individual contracts with suppliers and
There are one in 6 in our Warwickshire Schools eligible for free meals in published statistics in 2021.
23 alone - a 7% increase in cash terms
caterers, using their increased core funding”. “This funding has gone up by £4bn in 2022-
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