Axis Kast wrote: Locally (meaning the greater Chicago area, which extends into parts of Indiana and Wisconsin as well as Illinois) such foods as you describe are all required to have a sell-by date and this is enforced by local health inspectors. Of course, this will not eliminate ALL chicanery, but it does mean that even in bad neighborhoods with shitty hole-in-the-wall stores there is a watchdog to make sure such foods remain edible.
You are responding to me fourth sentence, beginning, "The latter pair..." In that instance, I was referring to the fact that some packaged food products, like TV dinners or frozen pizzas, are very durable. That isn't to say that I've never seen food linger on shelves long past its expiration date.
Is there a
problem with "durable" food products properly stored? You do realize that food preservation is something dating back millenia, yes?
Expired food is a problem in wealthy areas as well as poor. That is why inspectors go to both such areas. This is a problem common to ALL places that sell food, and the solutions are likewise universal. It is not a valid reason to say small stores won't be able to sell fruits and vegetables.
Certain types of fruit and vegetables actually do not require refrigeration, although of course they don't last as long. Some, such as bananas, should not be refrigerated.
That is correct, but many do. If this program is going to simultaneously curb obesity and improve access to healthy foods in inner cities, refrigeration and freshness will be significant issues.
In some neighborhoods apples, oranges, bananas, carrots, and iceberg lettuce by themselves would be actual improvements. We can start there.
There are also some urban areas where street vendors are still common and those might be a viable option for distributing fresh foods as well. I'm sure that the vendors on State Street in Chicago, with their piles of fresh fruit in the summer, are making enough to keep their business viable.
I'm not sure where you get the idea that gas station mini-marts are permitted to keep foods in unhealthy circumstances - the floors might get muddy in wet weather, but they're as clean as regular grocery stores in my experience (said experience largely encompassing Detroit, Michigan; Chicago, Illinois, and Gary, Indiana but also concerning those I encounter while traveling long distances).
I don't trust sandwiches at 7-11 or the gas station; fruit and vegetables from either location are equally uninspiring.
Oh, I see - because
you, personally don't like or trust something, because
you, personally are "uninspired" it couldn't
possibly work for anyone else. That's a bullshit defense.
Small urban convenience stores WILL stock fruits and vegetables IF people buy them. They absolutely have to satisfy their customer base. Of course, of necessity, what they stock need to be "durable" foods rather than some of the more delicate produce larger grocery stores stock.
Or they will go out of business because they cannot sell what they stock, and cannot afford to satisfy new tastes. By and large, the kinds of additions we are talking about aren't durable.
No, fucktard, read what I said -
If people will buy it they will stock it. I'm not talking about forcing small stores to stock exotic delicacies, I'm talking about small businessment trying to please the people who buy stuff.
Look at the Aldi busines plan - Aldi is international but the stores themselves are small-scale. They are bare bones and they often will be found in disadvantaged neighborhoods. The one I go to actually
does stock a range of fruits and vegetables that are comparable, in some cases better, than what you get at big mega-stores. The one I go to somehow manages to stock carrots, mushrooms, tomatoes, celery, 2 kinds of lettuce, 4 varities of bell pepper, 2 hot peppers, zucinni, broccoli, eggplant, rubarb (seasonal), onions, 3 kinds of potato, oranges, grapefruit, mangos, bananas, strawberries (seasonal), blueberries (seasonal), lemons, and likely one or two others I've forgotten or that are also seasonal. That's in an area of white trash, urban blacks, and far too many people who, like myself, are on food stamps. They don't stock vast quantities of any one item, but what they have is fresh and in good condition. In addition, they also stock 1 pound bags of frozen vegetables such as peas, several varities of greens like spinach and collard, brocolli, and mixed vegetables. From time to time they'll stock a new item in a small quantity - if it starts to sell they'll stock it, if not, they'll discontinue it.
The Aldi I go to is within walking distance of several rundown trailer parks. Without it, many of those people would have to travel miles to get to a grocery store, and many of them don't have reliable transportation and would be relying on high-priced, shitty "corner stores". Funny - some of those corner stores are out of business now, but Aldi's is doing just fine and in fact they expanded their hours and are open on Sunday, now, too. They
did hire a security guard... do you know what food people were trying to steal? It wasn't the frozen dinners, it was the
fruit. It's kinda funny how many homeless people eat oranges, you know? A handy little fruit that comes with its own protective wrapper, doesn't require constant refrigeration, doesn't require preparation, easily carried...
The other small urban store that seems to be enduring are the small scale Hispanic stores. When I lived in Chicago I used to go to one which, although Spanish was the primary language, always had at least one cashier able to speak English because poor whites and blacks would also show up and buy their fruits and vegetables because, for some odd reason, the Spanish-speaking immigrant small business folks in poor neighborhoods always managed to stay in business while stocking fruits and vegetables.
So actual reality indicates that it IS possible to stock and sell good food in poor neighborhoods. Even in the US, even today.
Axis Kast wrote:An additional consideration is whether smaller markets will be able to profit in the event of diversification. A friend who works at a small grocery store in Colorado offers some useful observations.
The suggestions offered in this thread presume that the tax imposed on junk food will drive up prices so that the consumer can purchase fresh food at the same cost, and still leave enough to cover subsidies or breaks for those that must then invest in refrigeration technology. There is no effort made to address demand. What about foods that don't sell?
Don't stock them. If the locals don't want arugula don't stock it. You're actually like someone is
dictating that small scale stores stock exotics no one ever heard of.
Again - look at Aldi. If sufficient people request a new item it will run as a special. If it sells well they'll continue to stock it. If it doesn't they'll discontinue it. There is usually one novel item every time I go into the store, but what that is changes frequently.
The markets will be eating the cost of whatever they can't move off shelves. Even in the event of collective bargaining, you're adding another step into the supply and distribution process: division of foods that must be bought in bulk, by the pallet or case, but for which there isn't enough demand at only one store. This process is now going to become a daily or thrice-weekly expense.
In other words
no different than now. What, you don't think this is a problem with junk food? A flavor of potato chip/crisp that never sells loses money by taking up shelf space that could go to a profitable item, it's just as much a liability as rotten fruit.
This also ignores the problem of stocking: under the model suggested, maintaining sufficient stocks of certain items will be very difficult. There will be little incentive for stores to purchase items they aren't sure whether they can sell, but with fruit and vegetables, consumers want to pick from the top of a large pile. They will very often avoid making a purchase if there are two or three of something left in the basket or on the shelf -- even if those items are healthy.
Farmer's markets don't prove that the co-op model will work in the inner city; farmer's markets already come to urban areas. There is a reason they don't come more often: demand won't support it.
Yet Detroit's Eastern Market is a major source of fresh produce for the urban poor in that city, they've even developed programs to allow food stamps to be used there (which is highly unusual). The initial program was so successful they expanded it - so there must be a significant number of poor folks showing up to buy things. Sure, it's more convenient if you can drop into a store any day or any time, but historically MOST people have done their food shopping at farmer's markets or market days and just adjusted their schedules accordingly. It's not a perfect solution but you're never going to get a perfect solution anyway. A bunch of mediocre to good solutions are better than a perfect solution that never arrives.
Axis Kast wrote:The real appeal to junk meals like frozen dinners -- Twinkies and chips are not actually competing with apples and oranges -- is that they can be prepared in minutes.
Not all frozen/packaged meals are created equal. If you categorize them all as "junk" then it tells me you've never actually looked at what's available. It is precisely in that area that a HCFS tax could have a significant effect, by making "non-junk" ingredients more competitive with HCFS, salt, and cheap fats.