The Great Grocery Squeeze
How a federal policy change in the 1980s created the modern food desert
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 dont have what it takes to attract and sustain a supermarket. Theyre either too poor or too sparsely populated to generate sufficient spending on groceries, or they cant 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 Dakotas 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. Thats 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 didnt 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.
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