Submitted by L0v3_1s_War t3_111qn74 in nyc
Comments
Fresh720 t1_j8hvql7 wrote
What study is that from?
elizabeth-cooper t1_j8i14sh wrote
>For decades, the conventional wisdom has been that people living in food deserts—defined as areas lacking in supermarkets with fresh produce and other nutritious items—have little choice but to buy unhealthy food at drugstores or convenience stores. But the data tell a different story.
>A new Chicago Booth study finds that food deserts have no meaningful effect on eating habits. Exposing low-income households to the same products and prices as those in high-income households reduces nutritional inequality by only 9 percent while the remaining 91 percent of the nutrition gap is driven by difference in what shoppers prefer to buy, according to a National Bureau of Economic Research working paper published recently.
newestindustry t1_j8i9j0s wrote
>By contrast, a means-tested subsidy for healthy groceries could increase low-income households’ healthy eating to the level of high-income households at about 15 percent of the cost of the SNAP program.
Never change, UChicago
Fresh720 t1_j8ie4ok wrote
I wonder how that study would do today considering tthe data was taken from 2004 to 2015. People are a bit more health conscious now, then they were 10 years ago
elizabeth-cooper t1_j8ikkx9 wrote
People aren't more health conscious now. Current research is suggesting that food "swamps" are more harmful than food "deserts." A food swamp is where there is an overabundance of unhealthy food establishments.
Fresh720 t1_j8j1lvt wrote
Strange I'm finding articles saying that younger generations are more health conscious, and it's gone up even more after the pandemic. I do think Food Swamps are a major factor, but processed food in general aling with a sedentary lifestyle might be the main culprits
elizabeth-cooper t1_j8jh781 wrote
People can say whatever they want - obesity continues to rise.
AnacharsisIV t1_j8jzypj wrote
I can be conscious about how fat I am and keep eating.
SirJoeffer t1_j8ikfsv wrote
Also doesn’t seem like that insightful of a study when it sounds like it comes down to ‘people bought what they were used to buying before even when presented with new options’. Especially when the new items are priced the same as they are in the high income areas grocery stores.
But yeah lets keep commenting on why giving poor people access to fruits and veggies is actually a BAD thing lol. Oml people will always hear about a good thing and immediately become cynical af about it and they’re the smart ones for knowing it won’t work bc this one study I found says I’m right and you’re a dumbass bleeding heart for supporting this. Like wtf lets just give the kids some fruit 😂
k1lk1 t1_j8i3t91 wrote
Got them receipts!
Shrug-Meh t1_j8ilc44 wrote
There’s a great book “How The Other Half Eats“ that explores this.
[deleted] t1_j8hchzo wrote
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elizabeth-cooper t1_j8hnenc wrote
Of course it's good to build more grocery stores, but it's been shown that they have no impact because people who live in food deserts don't buy fruit and veg even when it's available.
Anyway, if they really wanted people to eat more veg, they'd encourage buying frozen because it's quicker and easier to cook than fresh and just as nutritious.