Food and the Walmartization of Agriculture

donnay

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Food and the Walmartization of Agriculture

By Josh Sager

Global Research, July 02, 2013

Walmart has become an icon of the corporate rush to keep costs low and profits high, regardless of the effects on society.

They sell cheaply made goods—often produced in deplorable conditions—for low prices and keep overhead costs low by refusing to pay their workers a livable wage. It is this business strategy that catapulted them to be among the largest corporate interests in the world and allowed them to spread into virtually every corner of the United States.

Currently, approximately 25% of the American grocery market is controlled by Walmart, making it the largest single grocery distributor in the United States. In some areas—including many rural and low-income urban locales—this control is far larger than 25%, as the low prices of Walmart have crowded out competition and created a local monopoly. As Walmart is so much larger than its competitors (ex. farmer’s markets), it is able to undercut the prices of their competition and squeeze them out of business.

walmart_footprint.png


Walmart shops in the USA

The business model and sheer size of Walmart have caused their corporate practices to have huge impact on the global agricultural markets—they are so large that their choices lead to ripples in global agriculture markets.

The corporate decisions of Walmart have affected virtually every aspect of agriculture, including the growing practices of the producers, the conduct of other sellers, and the consumers of goods.

Food Sellers

The Walmartization of food sale has promoted the sale of cheap, processed, foods over that of the more expensive fresh produce and unprocessed foods. In addition to this, the massive need for cheap agricultural products has led to an increase in the prevalence of industrial “mono-crop” farms.

It is far easier and less expensive for food sellers to stock junk food and highly-processed, long-lasting foods than it is for them to stock fresh produce. Unlike produce, chips, pre-prepared meals, and many other processed foods do not spoil and require minimal labor to manage in a store—there is less of a need to have people spend time checking the freshness of the goods and less waste due to spoilage. To see this effect in action, you can simply go down to your local 7/11, Store 24, or Tedeschi’s and compare the prevalence of fresh products to non-perishable processed products.

When looking at this situation, it is important to note that healthy foods may be more expensive to sell, but they are ultimately, less expensive to the consumer. The leading cause of debt in the United States is medical care, and many of the severe long-term medical issues that we face can be addressed with a good diet. People who eat large amounts of processed, high calorie food suffer from increased health risks and are more likely to develop issues of diabetes, heart disease, and obesity-related disorders than those who eat a more healthy diet. In this case, junk food is cheaper to buy, but you may pay for in health consequences and medical bills later.

In many poorer areas of the country, “food deserts” have formed and people simply lack access to a supplier who sells healthy foods. A food desert is simply an area where poverty has driven out sellers of fresh, organic, and un-processed foods, leading to a situation where the only available foods are cheap, processed, pre-packaged, and unhealthy foods.

Walmart is large enough that these food deserts are a great place to set up shop (they can crowd out the already weak competition), and the company has already made attempts to move into existing food deserts. According to a recent study by the City of Manhattan, this encroachment into food deserts by Walmart will result in the destruction of most local food businesses (including those few which sell healthy food), and will not have any appreciable positive effect. Within a few years, the only “fresh” produce available in these places will come from the Walmart that took over the area’s grocery market.

Food Supply

If Walmart were to supply healthy, fresh and clean produce, their encroachment and takeover of food deserts would be a purely economic problem, but this is not the case. In recent years, Walmart has attempted to brand itself as a reliable supplier of not only snack food, but fresh produce. Unfortunately for them, this attempt has been marred by numerous situations that demonstrate that Walmart’s “fresh” produce is often of low quality and not really fresh. In fact, Walmart has a very bad history in regard to produce freshness and GMO labeling.

As reported by the news agency RT.com, Walmart is now selling Monsanto GMO produce, without warning labels, in their produce departments. Of particular note, Walmarts across the country are now selling Monsanto’s GMO corn on their shelves, while giving the consumer no warning whatsoever.

While Walmart claims to sell locally-sourced, organic foods, several scandals have questioned this claim. In a recent scandal in China, Walmarts were shut down for fraudulently selling port that was not organic, under the label that is was organic. Regardless of whether or not Walmart “organic” food is actually organic, Walmart gets most of its “organic” produce from suppliers in China and industrial farms—this means that regardless of which “organic food” a consumer may buy from Walmart, it is not likely to have come from a small, local farm.

Food Producers

The massive demand for food by our planet’s population and the proliferation of processed foods in the Walmartization of agriculture, has led to an increase in industrial mono-crop farming, particularly in regard to corn. Small farms are simply unable to produce the volume of produce that is sold by Walmart, so it is larger industrial farms which get Walmart’s business. Monocrop farming may claim to be more efficient at growing food, but this is simply not borne out by the evidence; such farms are not sustainable and often utilize extremely powerful pesticides in order to control pests.

The industrial mono-crop farming of corn is a very important part of this situation, as much of the world sweet-corn farming is used in the creation of high fructose corn syrup for processed foods. Virtually every processed food contains some amount of high fructose corn syrup, thus huge amounts of corn need to be grown. To make matters worse, American corn that is intended for high fructose corn syrup is commonly made out of GMO corn—oftentimes Monsanto “Roundup Ready” corn.

Conclusion

In totality, the proliferation of Walmart as a primary grocery source and the Walmartization of the American food supply is undeniably a consequential phenomenon. Some claim that this will result in cheaper food for the poor, but many others are worried that food will decrease in quality and this will eventually lead to serious health consequences.

In our current hard economic times, an increasing number of people are forced to turn to Walmart as a source of cheap food (or are forced to as smaller stores go under). Because of this, the business practices of Walmart are very relevant to the health of the food supply of the United States. We must ask ourselves, do we want to create a situation where agriculture and food supplies conform to the cheap, low-quality products business model of Walmart?

Source:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-wa...tm_campaign=the-walmartization-of-agriculture
 
My son was watching that show Master Chef and I guess they are now pushing Walmart food trying to say it's fresh/local...I've been in their food department and yes you can get some cheaper prices on processed food but very little organics...what they do have is no cheaper than the regular supermarket and frankly I wouldn't touch their mystery meat. I'll stick to my co-op for produce and my corner grocery for everything else.
 
I shop at local grocery stores instead of Walmart. In Pennsylvania, we have a lot of small farmer's market-type food stands and Weis Market. Definitely support the local and ethical businesses in your area!

Jib Jab made this video about Walmart...
 
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I shop at local grocery stores instead of Walmart. In Pennsylvania, we have a lot of small farmer's market-type food stands and Weis. Definitely support the local and ethical businesses in your area!

Was just up in Lansdale this passed weekend. Didn't see any produce stands or anything. Which I thought was rare for up there.
 
Because of Wal-Mart less people are starving and going hungry.

The article starts off with BS about wages and profits and turns into a whiny mess.

With capitalism we have income classes, and with that we get to choose what to purchase based on our wealth.

Higher classes can afford to buy higher quality food a grocery stores, or farmers markets or places like Whole Foods.

Lower classes can't always afford to buy food and have top notch quality. The solution to them having higher quality food is not to take away their food altogether.

Wal-Mart does not immorally wipe out competition. It caters to the demand of the community in which it is located.
 
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Because of Wal-Mart less people are starving and going hungry.

The article starts off with BS about wages and profits and turns into a whiny mess.

Well then perhaps we need to find some other scribbles that sell a more accurate picture of what comes with Walmart. I recall a recent discussion regarding Monsanto's questionable science experiments on the human species by claiming the right to do so via the old capitalism gag. Then they went and even got to legislate the rules. Maybe we should look to find some scribbles relative to the many poisons that Walmart lines their shelves with while, as you reference, targeting a specific class. You know? Poor people being scientifically illiterate and all, they'll never know. Right? and if'n they do I suppose we can get blackwater staged near the door some place. Ya think?

I'll go try to dig up some of those scribbles. :)
 
Was just up in Lansdale this passed weekend. Didn't see any produce stands or anything. Which I thought was rare for up there.

Hmmm... weird? I've never been to Lansdale, so I don't know the area too well.

Because of Wal-Mart less people are starving and going hungry.

The article starts off with BS about wages and profits and turns into a whiny mess.

With capitalism we have income classes, and with that we get to choose what to purchase based on our wealth.

Higher classes can afford to buy higher quality food a grocery stores, or farmers markets or places like Whole Foods.

Lower classes can't always afford to buy food and have top notch quality. The solution to them having higher quality food is not to take away their food altogether.

Wal-Mart does not immorally wipe out competition. It caters to the demand of the community in which it is located.

This is a major misconception. For food, Weis is actually cheaper than Walmart and has a larger variety. Walmart mostly sells processed foods that are extremely expensive compared to the raw ingredients -- most of which, Walmart doesn't even carry. For clothing and home goods -- you're better off going on eBay or to Goodwill and buying second hand stuff from quality reputable companies.
 
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Because of Wal-Mart less people are starving and going hungry.

The article starts off with BS about wages and profits and turns into a whiny mess.

With capitalism we have income classes, and with that we get to choose what to purchase based on our wealth.

Higher classes can afford to buy higher quality food a grocery stores, or farmers markets or places like Whole Foods.

Lower classes can't always afford to buy food and have top notch quality. The solution to them having higher quality food is not to take away their food altogether.

Wal-Mart does not immorally wipe out competition. It caters to the demand of the community in which it is located.


You just keep shopping at WalMarx, you may get a cameo in one of their videos.




 
This is a major misconception. For food, Weis is actually cheaper than Walmart and has a larger variety. Walmart mostly sells processed foods that are extremely expensive compared to the raw ingredients -- most of which, Walmart doesn't even carry. For clothing and home goods -- you're better off going on eBay or to Goodwill and buying second hand stuff from quality reputable companies.

Never heard of Weis. A quick google search tells me why: they have 162 stores in 5 states.

Processed foods are pretty much necessary if you want to be able to store them. As the article brought up in regards to profits...I doubt Wal-Mart would lose money on purpose. No business would.

Lots of people do go to Ebay and Goodwill, but some people want new products at a low price. I actually get most of my clothes at K-Mart.
 
You just keep shopping at WalMarx, you may get a cameo in one of their videos.

I would not be suited for one of those videos, nor would the overwhelming majority of Wal-Mart shoppers be.

Personally I don't buy much food at Wal-Mart but I won't demean those who have no purchasing power because of a state-run economy of inflation and subsidies.
 
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"and often utilize extremely powerful pesticides in order to control pests"

Which is necessary if you want to feed billions of people while minimizing risks of crop failure.
 
This article almost has a valid point but quickly ruins it with conjecture and fear-mongering.

Walmart has actually been making a major push lately to open up much smaller "Neighborhood Markets". I've never been in one but they're supposed to be pretty nice.
 
This article almost has a valid point but quickly ruins it with conjecture and fear-mongering.

Walmart has actually been making a major push lately to open up much smaller "Neighborhood Markets". I've never been in one but they're supposed to be pretty nice.

It's deception by design.

Do people realize that WalMarx worked with the DoD to get RFID's (Radio Frequency Identification) in all products? Of course the line is that it helps them with inventory but the problem is it tracks the products even after you leave the store.

Sources:
http://www.katherinealbrecht.com/in...to-track-your-every-move-with-rfidq&Itemid=94
http://www.rfidgazette.org/dod/
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,326002,00.html
https://www.cdt.org/privacy/031114rfid.pdf
http://www.spychips.com/alec-big-brother-barcode-article.html
http://www.wnd.com/2003/11/21809/
http://www.nocards.org/news/archive2.shtml
http://www.nocards.org/AutoID/overview.shtml
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1161
http://academia.edu/662688/RFID_Microchip_Technology_and_the_Internet_of_Things_
 
As Walmart is so much larger than its competitors (ex. farmer’s markets), it is able to undercut the prices of their competition and squeeze them out of business.
This is false. Walmart competes not just with farmers' markets and lemonade stands, but also with other grocery chains, many of which are very large multi-billion dollar corporations with more grocery locations than Walmart, and some of which are owned by even larger umbrella corporations with vast resources at their disposal. They quite commonly beat Walmart on price, as any experienced grocery shopper can tell you. In the West, Smith's (a Kroger's affiliate), for instance, I have found to have significantly better prices. Obivously ALDI blows them out of the water completely. In the Midwest, Woodman's beats them handily.



In many poorer areas of the country, “food deserts” have formed and people simply lack access to a supplier who sells healthy foods. A food desert is simply an area where poverty has driven out sellers of fresh, organic, and un-processed foods, leading to a situation where the only available foods are cheap, processed, pre-packaged, and unhealthy foods.
This is such bologna -- and I'm not talking about organic bologna, I'm talking fake, nonsense, highly processed, lies pressed together into a patty bologna. You know what causes these "food deserts" in bad neighborhoods? Theft! Endemic shop-lifting, plain and simple. The "poor, underprivileged waifs" rip off any grocery stores foolish enough to locate themselves within walking distance of them into utter oblivion. And then the politicians moan and groan about "Oh, the humanity! Why is there not a grocery store in this two-miles radius? Where, oh where did we go wrong as parents?" In the specific case I'm thinking of, guess what? There were two groceries that made a go of it, and they both had to shut down, because the massive, ceaseless shop-lifting killed their bottom line. It's a bad neighborhood full of criminals and they get what they deserve. "This is why we can't have nice things." Any decent person there can just drive three miles and buy a cornucopia of food from a plethora of providers.

In recent years, Walmart has attempted to brand itself as a reliable supplier of not only snack food, but fresh produce. Unfortunately for them, this attempt has been marred by numerous situations that demonstrate that Walmart’s “fresh” produce is often of low quality and not really fresh. In fact, Walmart has a very bad history in regard to produce freshness and GMO labeling.
Walmart has excellent fresh produce, of a high quality. It also stocks organic produce. See http://reclaimdemocracy.org/walmart_vs_whole_foods/
 


Very good references, Donnay. I wasn't even going to get into all of that but your work shows just how complex the issue is. Isn't just about some dolt's property rights and it seems like we in the liberty movement like to pick and choose what is convenient to tackle. This is yet another example of why there needs to be a dedicated place to put these sciences into proper perspectrive when discussing these kinds of things.
 
This is false. Walmart competes not just with farmers' markets and lemonade stands, but also with other grocery chains, many of which are very large multi-billion dollar corporations with more grocery locations than Walmart, and some of which are owned by even larger umbrella corporations with vast resources at their disposal. They quite commonly beat Walmart on price, as any experienced grocery shopper can tell you. In the West, Smith's (a Kroger's affiliate), for instance, I have found to have significantly better prices. Obivously ALDI blows them out of the water completely. In the Midwest, Woodman's beats them handily.
Smith's still exists? Here in my Phoenix suburbs, it was gobbled up by Fry's. (as was Smitty's :( )
 
Food and the Walmartization of Agriculture

By Josh Sager

Global Research, July 02, 2013


The corporate decisions of Walmart have affected virtually every aspect of agriculture, including the growing practices of the producers, the conduct of other sellers, and the consumers of goods.

Food Sellers

The Walmartization of food sale has promoted the sale of cheap, processed, foods over that of the more expensive fresh produce and unprocessed foods. In addition to this, the massive need for cheap agricultural products has led to an increase in the prevalence of industrial “mono-crop” farms.

It is far easier and less expensive for food sellers to stock junk food and highly-processed, long-lasting foods than it is for them to stock fresh produce. Unlike produce, chips, pre-prepared meals, and many other processed foods do not spoil and require minimal labor to manage in a store—there is less of a need to have people spend time checking the freshness of the goods and less waste due to spoilage. To see this effect in action, you can simply go down to your local 7/11, Store 24, or Tedeschi’s and compare the prevalence of fresh products to non-perishable processed products.
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It all comes down to the consumer habits of the population.In Europe you go every day or every other day to buy fresh vegetables mostly at the local market which is in walking distance.Bread is mostly bought from local bakeries and bread does not stay fresh for longer than a day.Consumers in the USA shop in longer time intervals.

If you go out to buy food every week or every second week,the store has to sell food that can last a long time period,and that is processed food.Of course in Europe as well when you want to buy food that last a longer time period you go to the big companies because they are cheaper.
 
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