Opinion The Great Grocery Squeeze - How a federal policy change in the 1980s created the modern food desert

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By Stacy Mitchell
December 1, 2024, 7 AM ET

The concept of the food desert has been around long enough that it feels almost like a fact of nature. Tens of millions of Americans live in low-income communities with no easy access to fresh groceries, and the general consensus is that these places just don’t have what it takes to attract and sustain a supermarket. They’re either too poor or too sparsely populated to generate sufficient spending on groceries, or they can’t overcome a racist pattern of corporate redlining.

But these explanations fail to contend with a key fact: Although poverty and ruralness have been with us forever, food deserts arrived only around the late 1980s. Prior to that, small towns and poor neighborhoods could generally count on having a grocery store, perhaps even several. (The term food desert was coined in 1995 by a task force studying what was then a relatively new phenomenon.)

The high-poverty, majority-Black Deanwood neighborhood of Washington, D.C., is typical of the trend. In the 1960s, the area had more than half a dozen grocery stores, according to a study by the anthropologist Ashanté Reese. These included a branch of the local District Grocery Stores co-op, a Safeway supermarket, and independent Black-owned businesses such as Tip Top Grocery on Sheriff Road. By the 1990s, however, the number of grocery stores in Deanwood had dwindled to just two, and today the neighborhood has none.

A similar story played out across rural America, following the same timeline. Up until the 1980s, almost every small town in North Dakota had a grocery store. Many, in fact, had two or more competing supermarkets. Now nearly half of North Dakota’s rural residents live in a food desert. (The USDA defines a food desert as a low-income census tract where the nearest grocery store is more than 10 miles away in a rural area or more than one mile away in a city.)

A slew of state and federal programs have tried to address food deserts by providing tax breaks and other subsidies to lure supermarkets to underserved communities. These efforts have failed. More food deserts exist now than in 2010, in the depths of the Great Recession. That’s because the proposed solutions misunderstand the origins of the problem.

Food deserts are not an inevitable consequence of poverty or low population density, and they didn’t materialize around the country for no reason. Something happened. That something was a specific federal policy change in the 1980s. It was supposed to reward the biggest retail chains for their efficiency. Instead, it devastated poor and rural communities by pushing out grocery stores and inflating the cost of food. Food deserts will not go away until that mistake is reversed.

The structure of the grocery industry has been a matter of national concern since the rise of large retail chains in the early 20th century. The largest was A&P, which, by the 1930s, was rapidly supplanting local grocery stores and edging toward market dominance. Congressional hearings and a federal investigation found that A&P possessed an advantage that had nothing to do with greater efficiency, better service, or other legitimate ways of competing. Instead, A&P used its sheer size to pressure suppliers into giving it preferential treatment over smaller retailers. Fearful of losing their biggest customer, food manufacturers had no choice but to sell to A&P at substantially lower prices than they charged independent grocers—allowing A&P to further entrench its dominance.

Congress responded in 1936 by passing the Robinson-Patman Act. The law essentially bans price discrimination, making it illegal for suppliers to offer preferential deals and for retailers to demand them. It does, however, allow businesses to pass along legitimate savings. If it truly costs less to sell a product by the truckload rather than by the case, for example, then suppliers can adjust their prices accordingly—just so long as every retailer who buys by the truckload gets the same discount.

For the next four decades, Robinson-Patman was a staple of the Federal Trade Commission’s enforcement agenda. From 1952 to 1964, for example, the agency issued 81 formal complaints to block grocery suppliers from giving large supermarket chains better prices on milk, oatmeal, pasta, cookies, and other items than they offered to smaller grocers. Most of these complaints were resolved when suppliers agreed to eliminate the price discrimination. Occasionally a case went to court.

During the decades when Robinson-Patman was enforced—part of the broader mid-century regime of vigorous antitrust—the grocery sector was highly competitive, with a wide range of stores vying for shoppers and a roughly equal balance of chains and independents. In 1954, the eight largest supermarket chains captured 25 percent of grocery sales. That statistic was virtually identical in 1982, although the specific companies on top had changed. As they had for decades, Americans in the early 1980s did more than half their grocery shopping at independent stores, including both single-location businesses and small, locally owned chains. Local grocers thrived alongside large, publicly traded companies such as Kroger and Safeway.

With discriminatory pricing outlawed, competition shifted onto other, healthier fronts. National chains scrambled to keep up with independents’ innovations, which included the first modern self-service supermarkets, and later, automatic doors, shopping carts, and loyalty programs. Meanwhile, independents worked to match the chains’ efficiency by forming wholesale cooperatives, which allowed them to buy goods in bulk and operate distribution systems on par with those of Kroger and A&P. A 1965 federal study that tracked grocery prices across multiple cities for a year found that large independent grocers were less than 1 percent more expensive than the big chains. The Robinson-Patman Act, in short, appears to have worked as intended throughout the mid-20th century.

Then it was abandoned. In the 1980s, convinced that tough antitrust enforcement was holding back American business, the Reagan administration set about dismantling it. The Robinson-Patman Act remained on the books, but the new regime saw it as an economically illiterate handout to inefficient small businesses. And so the government simply stopped enforcing it.

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That move tipped the retail market in favor of the largest chains, who could once again wield their leverage over suppliers, just as A&P had done in the 1930s. Walmart was the first to fully grasp the implications of the new legal terrain. It soon became notorious for aggressively strong-arming suppliers, a strategy that fueled its rapid expansion. By 2001, it had become the nation’s largest grocery retailer. Kroger, Safeway, and other supermarket chains followed suit. They began with a program of “self-consolidation”—centralizing their purchasing, which had previously been handled by regional divisions, to fully exploit their power as major national buyers. Then, in the 1990s, they embarked on a merger spree. In just two years, Safeway acquired Vons and Dominick’s, while Fred Meyer absorbed Ralphs, Smith’s, and Quality Food Centers, before being swallowed by Kroger. The suspension of the Robinson-Patman Act had created an imperative to scale up.

A massive die-off of independent retailers followed. Squeezed by the big chains, suppliers were forced to offset their losses by raising prices for smaller retailers, creating a “waterbed effect” that amplified the disparity. Price discrimination spread beyond groceries, hobbling bookstores, pharmacies, and many other local businesses. From 1982 to 2017, the market share of independent retailers shrank from 53 percent to 22 percent.

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If you were to plot the end of Robinson-Patman enforcement and the subsequent restructuring of the retail industry on a timeline, it would closely parallel the emergence and spread of food deserts. Locally owned retail businesses were once a mainstay of working-class and rural communities. Their inability to obtain fair prices beginning in the 1980s hit these retailers especially hard because their customers could least afford to pay more. Those who could travel to cheaper chain stores in other neighborhoods or towns were especially likely to do so. (Food deserts were not, by the way, a consequence of suburbanization and white flight, as some observers have suggested. By 1970, more Americans already lived in suburbs than in cities. Yet, at that point, low-income neighborhoods had more grocery stores per capita than middle-class areas. The relationship didn’t begin to reverse until the 1980s.)

Why didn’t large chains fill the void when local stores closed? They didn’t need to. In the 1960s, if a chain like Safeway wanted to compete for the grocery dollars spent by Deanwood residents, it had to open a store in the neighborhood. But once the independent stores closed, the chains no longer had to invest in low-income areas. They could count on people to schlep across town to their other locations. Today, in fact, many Deanwood residents travel to a Safeway outside the neighborhood to shop. This particular Safeway has had such persistent issues with expired meat and rotting produce that some locals have taken to calling it the “UnSafeway.” Yet, without alternatives, people keep shopping there.

In rural areas, the same dynamic means that Walmart can capture spending across a wide region by locating its supercenters in larger towns, counting on people in smaller places that no longer have grocery stores to drive long distances to shop for food. An independent grocer that tries to establish itself in a more convenient location will struggle to compete with Walmart on price because suppliers, who can’t risk losing Walmart’s business, will always give the mega-chain a better price. Indeed, during the height of the pandemic, when supply-chain disruptions left grocery manufacturers struggling to meet demand, Walmart announced stiff penalties for suppliers who failed to fulfill 98 percent of its orders. Suppliers complied by shorting independent grocers, who scrambled to keep staple products in stock even as Walmart’s shelves were full.

The problem of food deserts will not be solved without the rediscovery of the Robinson-Patman Act. Requiring a level pricing playing field would restore local retailers’ ability to compete. This would provide immediate relief to entrepreneurs who have recently opened grocery stores in food deserts, only to find that their inability to buy on the same terms as Walmart and Dollar General makes survival difficult. With local grocery stores back on the scene in these neighborhoods, chain supermarkets may well return, too, lured by a force far more powerful than tax breaks: competition.

The Biden administration has begun to connect the dots. Alvaro Bedoya, a member of the Federal Trade Commission, has been an outspoken proponent of Robinson-Patman enforcement, and the FTC under Chair Lina Khan is widely expected to file its first such case in the coming months. But Donald Trump’s election casts doubts on the long-term prospects for a Robinson-Patman revival. Although the law has garnered support among some GOP House members, powerful donors are calling for corporate-friendly appointments to the FTC. Hopefully the incoming Trump administration realizes that the rural and working-class voters who propelled him to power are among those most affected by food deserts—and by the broader decline in local self-reliance that has swept across small-town America since the 1980s. A powerful tool for reversing that decline is available. Any leader who truly cared about the nation’s left-behind communities would use it.

Support for this project was provided by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

Source (Archive)
 
I can't relate to this story at all.

Within 3 miles of my house I have 3 grocery stores. If I expand that to 5 miles I have 4 total. If I expand that to 10 miles, I have 6 total, and that's not even counting the farmer's market. When I was growing up as a kid I could literally walk to the grocery store by going 2 block to the main road, then a straight line south for maybe a mile. Even when I lived in NY, with the center of NYC being ~18 miles away, it was still 1.5 maybe 2 miles to a huge grocery store.

When I lived in the suburb of a major western European city I had a grocery store within a short walking distance. Maybe 3 miles away I had two major grocery chains. If I want to take the bus for literally just a few minutes, I could easily reach a 4th grocery store.

So, blue state, red state, US, non-US, A "food desert" is a completely foreign concept to me.

If I based this concept purely on my own lived experience, I'd say it's completely manufactured bullshit.
 
I find the concept interesting that rural stores focused on work supplies can exist in places where feeding people can't.
Extremely rural people are self-sufficient. They're likely growing some of their own food and trading with each other. Anything else might be delivered to them in bulk or bought in bulk every once in a while at a store that sells in bulk. If you grow enough of your own stuff and trade with other local you only need dry goods like flour, rice, beans, and some spices which can be bought in large quantities and stores for long periods of time.
 
Commissary is but a few minutes' drive away. One large supermarket and one medium supermarket within walking distance. A smaller store further away. No problem here.
 
Isn't "food desert" just a nicer way of saying "shitty neighborhood where it isn't worth even a megacorp to open a store because they'll be writing off six figures in losses every week"?
This is actually the unstated subtext of the article. Prior to this "reform", grocery stores in neighborhoods with "socio-economic conditions" could price their goods and services to account for the end result of the behavior that results from "socio-economic conditions". After the "reform" these stores had to conform with State averages that factored in areas completely absent "socio-economic conditions" under anti-discrimination efforts. The end result was the urban grocery store could not stay in business.
 
I can't relate to this story at all.

Within 3 miles of my house I have 3 grocery stores. If I expand that to 5 miles I have 4 total. If I expand that to 10 miles, I have 6 total, and that's not even counting the farmer's market. When I was growing up as a kid I could literally walk to the grocery store by going 2 block to the main road, then a straight line south for maybe a mile. Even when I lived in NY, with the center of NYC being ~18 miles away, it was still 1.5 maybe 2 miles to a huge grocery store.

Where I live (Southern US, near a city but not a hub city or anything), the food deserts are voluntary. The wealthy areas you can go for miles without a grocery store. They can drive. And the people living in the rural areas can drive. The urban, ghetto areas are all served by either stores directly or they have mass transit (How about that, Americans do have mass transit) to take them there.
 
I remember a video of an aftermath of a nigger looting spree at a grocery store, the place was completely barren except for the produce section, which was utterly untouched. Any remotely fresh fruit, vegetable, or meat was still sitting right out in the open. They wouldn't even take the time to steal it. Likewise, when people got up Dollar Tree's ass about "not giving fresh food options to marginalized communities", I recall Dollar Tree retorted that they had attempted pilot programs with fresh groceries at their stores and the product rotted on the shelves. Ghetto dwellers cannot be arsed to cook real food, combined with their enjoyment of stealing and robbery it spells an utter doom for any grocery that tried to set up shop in the hood.
 
I keep hearing about plans to build a new supermarket but nothing seems to be happening. The lot is turning to sand. The whole building smells like piss and has already been set on fire once. I see people coming out of the basement on occasion. So someone's living in there.
That's the same everywhere. I think my town isn't too bad off. We lost a couple grocery stores, but there's still like a half dozen in town. Malls and Retail are taking downturns everywhere.
The end result was the urban grocery store could not stay in business.
That's true of a lot of stores, not just grocery stores. In my city's downtown core, about the only new things we've had open up are like vape shops and middle eastern restaurants, most of which don't stick around. The new vape shop is already closed, and for lease again, and I doubt the Lebanese restaurant is going to last sandwiched between three bars. Over half of some malls are for lease. Between tax, loss from theft, and supply issues, it's a wonder more places aren't shuttered.
 
I remember a video of an aftermath of a nigger looting spree at a grocery store, the place was completely barren except for the produce section, which was utterly untouched. Any remotely fresh fruit, vegetable, or meat was still sitting right out in the open. They wouldn't even take the time to steal it. Likewise, when people got up Dollar Tree's ass about "not giving fresh food options to marginalized communities", I recall Dollar Tree retorted that they had attempted pilot programs with fresh groceries at their stores and the product rotted on the shelves. Ghetto dwellers cannot be arsed to cook real food, combined with their enjoyment of stealing and robbery it spells an utter doom for any grocery that tried to set up shop in the hood.
I'm suddenly reminded of the seasoning police lady.
 
Isn't "food desert" just a nicer way of saying "shitty neighborhood where it isn't worth even a megacorp to open a store because they'll be writing off six figures in losses every week"?
It doesn't help that every grocery store that closed because of unchecked shoplifting says "we're definitely not closing because of unchecked shoplifting," allowing retarded journos like the OP to say with a straight face "it's not because of crime".

but that doesn't explain the rural areas which is a logistics problem.
 
Hogwash. A food desert is where there's nowhere to buy food. If it's a 30 minute drive to the store and everyone has a car, it's not a food desert: if it's a 30 minute drive and nobody has a car, then it is.
Now, places where a lot of people are boned for transport do happen, but these places will have enough non-driving customers to support a shop: where I live in NZ is a short walk to a small store, because it's near a retirement village and a lot of the old folks don't drive. Prices are a bit higher but it works well enough. I'm currently tooling around Northern California in a small town full of Mexican farmhands with questionable paperwork, but it still manages a shop because they're the proud sort of poor.
Where that doesn't work is places with an infestation of niggers and hobos who steal shit all the time. The store goes out of business and everyone else suffers, but apparently we're supposed to believe it's all Walmarts fault for (checks notes) selling cheap food.
Oh, do fuck off.

If you want to fix the problem, lock up the niggers and hobos. As an aside:
Support for this project was provided by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
This appears to a San Francisco based outfit, who I suspect have caused more than their fair share of issues.
 
Yes. The stuff about North Dakota is a red herring thrown in to muddy the waters; small towns in ND (or anywhere) lose their grocery stores because they are dying. Deanwood has no grocery stores because anyone with the brains to run a store won't go without ten miles of Deanwood.
All those towns that once had 200+ people and in the last two decades are basically down to 12 or less.
 
Rockford IL had a sHoPsTeaD pRoGrAm to redevelop the west side of town and bring commerce and polite society to the NIGGERS and BOONZ in the late 1980's-1990's.

Guess what became of that?

* NIGGERS and BOONZ received brand new, state of the art, stripmalls and buildings--complete with repaved roads, plantings, and lampposts.
* Priority was given to NIGGER/BOON business owners to move in.
* NIGGERS and BOONZ were given hiring priority in said established businesses.
* In LESS than 4 years, this self same cOmMuNiTy ended up stealing money from cash registers, giving dey franz and fambily five finger discounts, shoplifted, robbed, and gangbanged every single solitary one of the various businesses that tried moving in under the shopstead program.

Somehow... this was white peoples' fault. Even though the shopstead program started under the administration of Mayor Charles Box--also of the Box Barbecue restaurant on the city's SW side.

So I guess I'm saying that I'm a bit... skeptical of the reasons white race traitors give for food desterts.
 
1 mile? So 1,6km, I live in a food desert! I almost feel like taking the 5 minute bike ride or 15 minute walk to the store just to thank them for their service, but I would just end up buying something unhealthy, again.
 
Boy it's like the phenomenon is rooted in post-Rodney King race riots making upper class whites refuse to ever punish a black person for petty crime or something
Make shoplifting illegal again and I betcha the hood will have grocery stores again.
>informative article about applied economics and American history
>provides helpful examples of how legislation affects everyday life in a country
>fellow kiwis respond to article with examples of population decrease affecting access to more varied retailers, other interesting facts
>"the world has problems because black people like to steal"
 
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