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Food for thought/thoughts on food

So let’s get started.  First question: are we paying too much for our food?  The Canadian Heart and Stroke Foundation thinks we do. Or at least some of us are paying too much. According to their numbers, 47% of Canadians are foregoing some of the basics such as fresh fruit and vegetables, dairy products, and meat and fish at least some of the time because of cost.  A recently-released study showed a wide discrepancy in grocery costs nationwide. Whole wheat pasta, for example, ranged from a low of $2.00 in Barrie, Ontario to a whopping $11 in Dawson, Yukon.  Meanwhile, prices for such staples as potato chips, soda pop, and packaged cookies were about the same everywhere.  What gives?

And yet, food guru Michael Pollan argues that North Americans are paying way too little for food.  It’s a hard sell – after all, who really wants to fork over more money to the supermarket giants, who already seem to be doing quite nicely on our dime, thanks. But, argues Pollan and others, food prices are kept artificially low by government subsidies to Big Agriculture, with its heavy reliance on monocultures such as corn and soya production,  and don’t reflect the true costs of producing high-quality, diversified food stuffs.  On the surface at least, this sounds like the elitist complaints of someone who spends too much time at Whole Foods, comparing prices for organic arugula and too little time feeding the family every night from the less esoteric options at Costco. But Pollan points out that, without these massive subsidies, responsible for such modern miracles of nutritional alchemy as high fructose corn syrup, Coca Cola, for one example, would become much more expensive, hence less desirable as belly filler, thus freeing up both valuable money and appetite for other, better options. 

So how much is too much? Surely no one should have to pay nearly six times the going price for a pound of pasta, just because of geography. But just as surely in a sensible world a litre of nutritionally valueless Coke would cost more than a litre of milk.   

Nice blog!

Potato chips, soda pop and packaged cookies….staples? 

Maybe that’s part of the problem!

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  03/08  at  12:27 AM

I think there are a couple of key issues that are at play here and not necessarily in conflict.  The articles point that food prices vary greatly across the country I’ll take as true.  And certainly we have seen a significant rise in food prices as a percentage of income in the last couple of years driven largely by fuel and commodity price increases.

Pollan’s argument is valid too, however.  The subsidies to US agriculture is very distorting and wide ranging.  It includes direct payment on corn and soy production (which leads to an overconsumption of these goods relative to others because of price), farm income supplements and it can even include defence expenditures to keep the price of oil low which encourages carbon intensive production and longer travel for food(though this is a more controversial argument).

Pollan also talks about how in the past 30-40% of our income would go for food and how now it is typically around 10% in North America.  This I believe is his key point for saying we don’t pay enough for our food.

That point does little to comfort us as we look at the rising cost of food now.  My perspective is that the economy is dynamic, i.e., prices adjust over time despite periodic spikes.  My thinking is, if you address the subsidies and distortions at the production level, other prices adjust around it (housing, fuel, transportation, etc)  We all have relatively fixed incomes to work with, so prices have to respond at some point or the goods will not be consumed.

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  04/17  at  09:21 AM

The cost of most things up north (not just food) is more for obvious reasons (not sure why junk food is the same) but northerners do receive a northern living allowance which helps even things out.

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  07/27  at  02:19 PM

nice blog.
<a href=“http://www.divineflowers.ca” rel=“dofollow”>North Vancouver Florist</a>

Posted by North Vancouver Florist  on  04/21  at  12:43 AM

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