Let's call a polygon $P$ shrinkable if any down-scaled (dilated) version of $P$ can be translated into $P$. For example, the following triangle is shrinkable (the original polygon is green, the dilated polygon is blue):
But the following U-shape is not shrinkable (the blue polygon cannot be translated into the green one):
What is the largest group of shrinkable polygons?
Currently I have the following sufficient condition: if $P$ is star-shaped then it is shrinkable.
Proof: By definition of a star-shaped polygon, there is a point $A\in P$ such that for all other points $B\in P$, the segment $AB$ is entirely contained in $P$. Translate the dilated polygon $P'$ such that $A'$ coincides with $A$ (its counterpart in $P$). Now every point $B' \in P'$ is on the segment $AB$, hence it is in $P$:
My questions are:
A. Is the condition of being star-shaped also necessary for shrinkability?
B. Alternatively, what other condition on $P$ is necessary?