Food Deserts and the Causes of Nutritional Inequality*

Author:

Allcott Hunt1,Diamond Rebecca2,Dubé Jean-Pierre3,Handbury Jessie4,Rahkovsky Ilya5,Schnell Molly6

Affiliation:

1. New York University and National Bureau of Economic Research

2. Stanford Graduate School of Business and National Bureau of Economic Research

3. University of Chicago Booth School of Business and National Bureau of Economic Research

4. Wharton and National Bureau of Economic Research

5. U.S. Department of Agriculture

6. Northwestern University and National Bureau of Economic Research

Abstract

Abstract We study the causes of “nutritional inequality”: why the wealthy eat more healthfully than the poor in the United States. Exploiting supermarket entry and household moves to healthier neighborhoods, we reject that neighborhood environments contribute meaningfully to nutritional inequality. We then estimate a structural model of grocery demand, using a new instrument exploiting the combination of grocery retail chains’ differing presence across geographic markets with their differing comparative advantages across product groups. Counterfactual simulations show that exposing low-income households to the same products and prices available to high-income households reduces nutritional inequality by only about 10%, while the remaining 90% is driven by differences in demand. These findings counter the argument that policies to increase the supply of healthy groceries could play an important role in reducing nutritional inequality.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference83 articles.

1. The Intergenerational Transmission of Inequality: Maternal Disadvantage and Health at Birth;Aizer;Science,2014

2. Disparities in Access to Fresh Produce in Low-Income Neighborhoods in Los Angeles;Algert;American Journal of Preventive Medicine,2006

3. The Geography of Poverty and Nutrition: Food Deserts and Food Choices Across the United States;Allcott,2017

4. Replication Data for: ‘Food Deserts and the Causes of Nutritional Inequality;Allcott,2019

5. Regressive Sin Taxes, with an Application to the Optimal Soda Tax;Allcott;Quarterly Journal of Economics,2019

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