 Think your grocery bill is high now? Just wait! A massive corporate merger could send skyrocketing food prices through the stratosphere unless government sees the deal for what it is. A rotten egg. Supermarket giant Kroger is in the process of finalizing a nearly $25 billion dollar deal to acquire its jumbo-sized competitor, Albertsons, combining their 5,000 supermarkets into one mega company. The concentration in the grocery market is already a huge problem, with estimates showing that just five companies control over 60% of American grocery sales. This means less consumer choice and more opportunity for grocery stores to jack up prices, which they've already been doing under the cover of inflation. Let's be clear, big corporations are using the excuse of inflation to pass price increases through to you. If we view a little bit of inflation as always good in our business, we would expect to be able to pass that through. This coming from a CEO whose recent $18 million dollar compensation was already 679 times that of the typical Kroger employee. What's that smell? It's not a rotisserie chicken, it's your pocketbook getting roasted. Now you may think this merger won't affect you because you don't have a Kroger or Albertsons where you live, but here's the kicker. Both stores already control dozens of other grocery brands across the country. So you may not know you're actually shopping at Kroger or Albertsons. All told, this deal could affect grocery stores relied on by 85 million households. What's to stop this new Goliath from continually raising prices of customers of nowhere else to shop? With grocery builds already going through the roof, Kroger buying Albertsons gets rid of the roof altogether. A Kroger owned mega company can also get away with paying workers even less than it already does because fewer competitors means grocery workers have fewer choices of whom to work for. According to one survey, 75% of Kroger workers have been food insecure and 14% have experienced homelessness. One out of every five Kroger workers has relied on government aid to survive. This is no secret to Kroger executives either. Recently leaked internal documents reveal that the company has known about the plight of its workers for years. Folks, this is the story of monopolization. Corporate consolidation is bad news for everyone except the super rich. It's awful for consumers, workers and the economy as a whole and it's driving the most extreme wealth imbalance in over a century. But the good news is that this Kroger Albertsons deal is far from being fully baked. The Federal Trade Commission has the power to intervene and stop it. Several labor unions, produce growers, antitrust experts and state attorneys general are already urging the FTC to block it. We can't afford to let another supermarket giant gobble up an even bigger piece of the American pie.