So a German court has ruled that Milka bars have shrunk without proper notification. The judges in Frankfurt have decreed that customers were cheated. And now, predictably, British consumer laws are being hailed as the gold standard. How perfectly, exquisitely predictable.
Let us first savour the irony. Germany, that paragon of efficiency, that bastion of engineering precision, has been caught shortchanging its chocolate-loving public. The Milka bar, that purple-wrapped emblem of Alpine creaminess, has been quietly reduced in size while the packaging remained unchanged. It is a tale as old as commerce itself, but one that carries particular weight in a nation that prides itself on Ordnung and fairness.
Of course, the British media is now having a field day. Our consumer protection laws are suddenly the envy of Europe. The Trading Standards Institute must be positively giddy. But let us not be too hasty in our self-congratulation. The real story here is not about chocolate. It is about the slow, creeping decadence that has gripped the European continent. We are witnessing the intellectual and commercial decay of a civilisation that once ruled the world.
Consider the context. We live in an age of shrinkflation, where everything from loo roll to biscuits is being reduced in size while prices remain stubbornly high. It is the economic equivalent of death by a thousand cuts. And yet, the only response from our continental cousins is to run to the courts. Where is the outrage? Where is the sense of honour? In Victorian times, a businessman caught cheating his customers would have faced social ruin. Today, he faces a fine and a court order. Progress, of course.
The German court’s decision is perfectly sensible in legal terms. If a product’s size changes, the packaging should reflect that. But this misses the larger point. The Milka bar is a metaphor for the European soul: it has been hollowed out, reduced in substance, while the wrapping remains the same. We are all being sold a illusion of prosperity, of stability, of a functioning social market economy. But the reality is that our institutions are failing. The bureaucrats in Brussels, the judges in Frankfurt, they are all fiddling while Rome burns.
And what of Britain? We have left the European Union, but we still imitate its worst habits. Our own supermarkets are masters of the shrinkflation game. Walk into any Tesco or Sainsbury’s and you will see the same trickery: smaller packets, inflated prices, and a general sense that the consumer is being played for a fool. We have no moral high ground here. We are merely better at hiding our sins behind a thin veneer of politeness.
The real tragedy is that we have accepted this as normal. We no longer expect value for money. We no longer trust the brands we grew up with. We have become a nation of cynics, shrugging our shoulders at each new indignity. Milka shrinks, we shrug. Pot Noodle shrinks, we shrug. It is a slow erosion of trust, a quiet surrender to the forces of greed and mediocrity.
Perhaps the German court has done us a service. It has reminded us that the law can still protect the little guy. But let us not pretend that this is a victory. It is a symptom of a deeper sickness. The empire of the mind is collapsing, and we are arguing over the size of a chocolate bar. History will not be kind to us.
