From: AlterNet
By Stacy Mitchell
By Stacy Mitchell
This article was published in partnership with the Institute for Local
Self-Reliance [3].
When Michelle Obama visited a Walmart in Springfield,
Missouri, a few weeks ago to praise the company's efforts
to sell healthier food, she did not say why she chose a
store in Springfield of all cities. But, in ways that
Obama surely did not intend, it was a fitting choice. This
Midwestern city provides a chilling look at where Walmart
wants to take our food system.
Springfield is one of nearly 40 metro areas
where Walmart now captures about half or more of consumer
spending on groceries, according to Metro Market Studies.
Springfield area residents spend just over $1 billion on
groceries each year, and one of every two of those dollars
flows into a Walmart cash register. The chain has 20
stores in the area and shows no signs of slowing its
growth. Its latest proposal, a store just south of the
city's downtown, has provoked widespread protest.
Opponents say Walmart already has an overbearing presence
in the region and argue that this new store would
undermine nearby grocery stores, including a 63-year-old
family-owned business which still provides delivery for
its elderly customers. A few days before the First Lady's
visit, the City Council voted 5-4 to approve what will be
Walmart's 21st store in the community.
As Springfield goes, so goes the rest of
the country, if Walmart has its way. Nationally, the
retailer's share of the grocery market now stands at 25
percent. That's up from 4 percent just 16 years ago.
Walmart's tightening grip on the food system is
unprecedented in U.S. history. Even A&P — often
referred to as the Walmart of its day — accounted for only
about 12 percent of grocery sales at its height in the
1940s. Its market share was kept in check in part by the
federal government, which won an antitrust case against
A&P in 1946. The contrast to today's casual
acceptance of Walmart's market power could not be more
stark.
Having gained more say over our food supply
than Monsanto, Kraft, or Tyson, Walmart has been working
overtime to present itself as a benevolent king. It has
upped its donations to food pantries, reduced sodium and
sugars in some of its store-brand products, and recast its
relentless expansion as a solution to "food deserts." In
2011, it pledged
[4] to build 275-300
stores "in or near" low-income communities lacking grocery
stores. The Springfield store Obama visited is one of 86
such stores Walmart has since opened. Situated half
a mile from the southwestern corner of a census tract
[5] identified as
underserved by the USDA, the store qualifies as "near" a
food desert. Other grocery stores are likewise perched on
the edge of this tract. Although Walmart has made food
deserts the vanguard of its PR strategy in urban areas,
most of the stores the chain has built or proposed in
cities like Chicago and Washington D.C. are in fact just
blocks from established supermarkets, many unionized or
locally owned. As it pushes into cities, Walmart's
primary aim is not to fill gaps but to grab market share.
***
The real effect of Walmart's takeover of
our food system has been to intensify the rural and urban
poverty that drives unhealthy food choices. Poverty has a
strong negative effect on diet, regardless of whether
there is a grocery store in the neighborhood or not, a
major 15-year study
[6] published in 2011
in the Archives of Internal Medicine found. Access to
fresh food cannot change the bottom-line reality that
cheap, calorie-dense processed foods and fast food are
financially logical choices for far too many American
households. And their numbers are growing right alongside
Walmart. Like Midas in reverse, Walmart extracts wealth
and pushes down incomes in every community it touches,
from the rural areas that produce food for its shelves to
the neighborhoods that host its stores.
Walmart has made it harder for farmers and
food workers to earn a living. Its rapid rise as a grocer
triggered a wave of mergers among food companies, which,
by combining forces, hoped to become big enough to supply
Walmart without getting crushed in the process. Today,
food processing is more concentrated than ever. Four
meatpackers slaughter 85 percent of the nation's beef.
One dairy company handles 40 percent of our milk,
including 70 percent of the milk produced in New England.
With fewer buyers, farmers are struggling to get a fair
price. Between 1995 and 2009, farmers saw their share
of each consumer dollar spent on beef fall from 59 to 42
cents [7].
Their cut of the consumer milk dollar likewise fell from
44 to 36 cents. For pork, it fell from 45 to 25 cents
and, for apples, from 29 to 19 cents.
Onto this grim reality, Walmart has grafted
a much-publicized initiative to sell more locally grown
fruits and vegetables. Clambering aboard the "buy local"
trend undoubtedly helps Walmart's marketing, but, as
Missouri-based National Public Radio journalist Abbie
Fentress Swanson reported
[8] in February,
"there's little evidence of small farmers benefiting, at
least in the Midwest." Walmart, which defines "local" as
grown in the same state, has increased its sales of local
produce mainly by relying on large industrial growers.
Small farmers, meanwhile, have fewer opportunities to
reach consumers, as independent grocers and smaller chains
shrink and disappear.
Food production workers are being squeezed
too. The average slaughterhouse wage has fallen 9 percent
since 1999. Forced unpaid labor at food processing plants
is on the rise. Last year, a Louisiana seafood plant that
supplies Walmart was convicted of forcing employees to
work in unsafe conditions for less than minimum wage. Some
workers reported peeling and boiling crawfish in shifts
that spanned 24 hours.
The tragic irony is that many
food-producing regions, with their local economies
dismantled and poverty on the rise, are now themselves
lacking grocery stores. The USDA has designated
large swaths of the farm belt [9], including many
agricultural areas near Springfield, as food deserts.
***
One might imagine that squeezing farmers
and food workers would yield lower prices for consumers.
But that hasn't been the case. Grocery prices have been
rising. There are multiple reasons for this, but
corporate concentration is at least partly to blame. For
most foods, the spread between what consumers pay and how
much farmers receive has been widening. Food processors
and big retailers are pocketing the difference. Even as
Walmart touts lower prices than its competitors, the
company's reorganization of our food system has had the
effect of raising grocery prices overall.
As Walmart stores multiply, fewer families
can afford to eat well. The company claims it stores
bring economic development and employment, but the
empirical evidence indicates otherwise. A study
[10] published in 2008
in the Journal of Urban Economics examined about 3,000
Walmart store openings nationally and found that each
store caused a net decline of about 150 jobs (as competing
retailers downsized and closed) and lowered total wages
paid to retail workers. Other research
[11] by the economic
consulting firm Civic Economics has found that, when
locally owned businesses are replaced by big-box stores,
dollars that once circulated in the community, supporting
other businesses and jobs, instead leak out. These shifts
may explain the findings of another study
[12], published in
Social Science Quarterly in 2006, which cut straight to
the bottom line: neighborhoods where Walmart opens end up
with higher poverty rates and more food-stamp usage than
places where the retailer does not expand.
This year, Walmart plans to open between
220 and 240 stores in the U.S., as it marches steadily on
in its quest to further control the grocery market.
Policymakers at every level, from city councilors to
federal antitrust regulators, should be standing in its
way. Very few are. Growing numbers of people, though,
are drawing the line, from the Walmart employees who have
led a string of remarkable strikes against the company, to
the coalition of small business, labor, and community
groups that recently forced Walmart to step
back [13] from
its plans to unroll stores across New York City.
Back in Springfield, as Michelle Obama was
delivering her remarks, framed by a seductive backdrop of
oranges and lemons, a citizens group called Stand
Up to Walmart [14]
was also at work, launching a referendum drive to overturn
the City Council's vote and block Walmart from gaining any
more ground in the city.
See more stories tagged with:
walmart [15],
food [16],
poverty [17]
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