Jul 6: Hospitalizations have increased by 5 percent or more in 23 states. The Supreme Court rules unanimously that the 538 people picked to cast votes in the Electoral College must vote according to their states’ laws.
There is a warm, happy feeling when you are able to feed a family of five for a week on less than $150.00. You plan the meals to be quick and decent tasting, with leftovers for lunch the next day: carnitas with corn tortillas, cilantro, onion, and salsa verde, chicken and cabbage made the Russian way with paprika and tomatoes, Shakshuka with feta and olives, baked ziti with spinach, bell peppers, onion, tomato, and ricotta, red beans and rice with real andouille sausage, fried catfish with black eyed peas, collard greens, and cornbread made in a cast iron skillet. These are the go-to dishes in my house and I know that I can make them, along with breakfast and lunch, and still have enough money left over to buy a bottle of wine. Today, I realized that I cannot afford these foods anymore. Groceries have gotten so expensive over the past couple of months. I know there is a pandemic raging and that people have been storing goods. But food hoarding, which was high in March, has largely ended. This alone cannot account for why eggs and meat prices have soared to almost 5% higher than they were a year ago.[1]
Reports insist that the food supply chain problems that were so catastrophic in May have largely been solved. And yet, the cost of food continues to be high. The last of the $600 supplemental weekly federal unemployment benefit checks were mailed out last Friday. And we know that, even if unemployment rates get better, poverty and food insecurity will still take a longer time to recover.
According to Elise Golan, the Director of Sustainability at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, some of the cost is because of the way that we are getting the food from the grocery store. High density cities, where people took the virus very seriously went all in on pick-up or delivery groceries. This behavior required a labor shift from stores, especially as so many who did try these delivery services in the early days of quarantine found them inadequate. And grocery store workers needed to have PPE supplied and other safety practices that cost money, much of which got passed along to us in our food costs. It surprises me that, according to reports, not that many people used the dedicated app-based grocery services like Instacart. Amazon was the e-grocery store of choice, especially among younger shoppers.[2] Now that Amazon warehouse laborers are protesting the working conditions, I wonder if these younger, supposedly “woker” younger shoppers will shift where they spend their grocery dollars. Some of the higher prices is no doubt still due to the disruption in the food supply chains. We still have the situation where school and restaurant closures, the near-absence of hotel traffic, and the closure of many other public institutions with their own cafeterias and snack bars means that nearly every food distributor is having to change their delivery structures to send more food to the grocery stores where people are buying food. They also have to change how they package food, which means changing factory machinery. We also still have some farmers who are destroying supplies, either because they have no way to get their goods to their buyers or because they are trying to hike up prices. According to Meat+Poulty, only 17% of the meatpacking plants that closed back in May have reopened, mostly because workers are still getting sick.[3] History has shown again and again that in moments of crisis, when you need quick mobilization of vast resources and people, capitalist systems struggle to adapt. Back in 1941, when the Germans invaded the Soviet Union and the Japanese attacked the United States, the centralized economy of the Soviet Union made it possible for them to uproot entire factories almost overnight, move them to the hinterlands beyond the Ural mountains, and put them back together. They did this while the Germans were invading their homeland, destroying cities, and killing millions. In contrast, the United States was slow to switch to a war footing, even with the advantage of not having enemies on their home soil. Each factory had a separate owner with whom negotiations and incentives were required to switch to war production. Eventually, the United States adopted a centralized infrastructure, forcing Detroit car makers, for instance, to switch to tank production. America’s food supply represents millions of farmers, processors, factory owners, and distributors, all of whom have to adjust individually to the new normal. None of them have stored extra food for a rainy day or put down plans for such an eventuality—that is something that a state-run system would do. The whole chain is so brittle that when disruption like this comes along, only gigantic corporations, who function like states, can adjust by scaling up or down production, using their leverage with banks and even governments to keep afloat. Or maybe, capitalism is working just like it is supposed to under the circumstances. There is no question that people in the grocery world are making a lot of money. Food companies continue to show historic profits. B&G foods, saw a 38% increase in sales in the second quarter of this year. Nestle and Pepsi have stayed in the black. The grocery stores are also making money. Publix saw a second quarter increase of $1.94 per share this year, in contrast to the $.92 they saw last year. Their sales have jumped 20%.[4] It seems fair to say that they are all passing their increased costs along to consumers like me, sitting in the checkout line, thinking about why my ground beef has tripled in price. I wonder sometimes if they are hiking their prices because know they can and we will still buy. I don’t feel safe going to restaurants even now, so the grocery store gets all my business. The only work around now is to buy as much as I can from food consignment shops like Big Lots. Others are waiting in line at food kitchens. Notes [1] United States Census Bureau, “Business and Industry: Time Series / Trend Charts – 44X72: Retail Trade and Food Services,” Census.gov, n/a, https://www.census.gov/econ/currentdata/dbsearch?program=MRTS&startYear=2019&endYear=2020&categories=44511&dataType=MPCSM&geoLevel=US¬Adjusted=1&submit=GET+DATA&releaseScheduleId; Liam O’Connell, “Monthly Food and Beverage Store Sales U.S. 2020,” Statista, July 20, 2020, https://www.statista.com/statistics/805047/food-and-beverage-store-sales-us-by-month/; USDA, “Summary Findings-Food Price Outlook 2020,” United States Department of Agriculture – Economic Research Service, July 2020, https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-price-outlook/summary-findings/. [2] Blake Droesch, “Five Charts: How Coronavirus Has Impacted Digital Grocery,” eMarketer, May 12, 2020, https://www.emarketer.com/content/five-charts-how-coronavirus-has-impacted-digital-grocery. [3] Sam Danley and Ryan McCarthy, “Map: COVID-19 Meat Plant Closures,” Meat+Poultry, July 6, 2020, https://www.meatpoultry.com/articles/22993-covid-19-meat-plant-map. [4] Russell Redman, “Sales at Publix Jump 20% in Second Quarter,” Supermarket News, August 3, 2020, https://www.supermarketnews.com/retail-financial/sales-publix-jump-20-second-quarter.
Sam Brock, “Grocery Prices Are The Highest They’ve Been In Decades,” Today Show, NBC (May 13, 2020), https://youtu.be/IjwglJ-QrLo
“Middle-class Americans queue at food banks as US unemployment hits 38 million,” BBC News (May 22, 2020), https://youtu.be/iWT9aOE0OGo
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— D. Giles (@ItsRellzWorld) June 27, 2020
On day 7,452 I finally found Sanitizing wipes in the grocery store. I could cry. pic.twitter.com/nnqJ101MDw
— Julian Glover (@JulianGABC7) July 6, 2020
Some Chicago neighborhoods don’t have grocery stores. https://t.co/5tgcquVwqA
— Robert Emmons Jr. (@r_emmonsJr) July 6, 2020
“If I can wear a mask through 38 hours of labor, a C-section and recovery . . . you can do it for an hour while running to the grocery store and/or other errands.”https://t.co/OTO6qRUJ98
— Good Morning America (@GMA) July 6, 2020
Hello, my kid is an essential worker at a grocery store. I have a small favor to ask. When using ApplePay just type in the damn passphrase. Removing your mask for FaceID ends up exposing workers hundreds of times a day.
— Mike Monteiro🌹 (@monteiro) July 5, 2020
U.S. farmers say they’re struggling to find reliable workers — which may delay wheat harvests and make food prices go up.
Immigrants and foreign seasonal workers make up the bulk of farm workers (and ~50% are undocumented), but many are now shut out by lockdowns and visa delays. pic.twitter.com/lcLmJ59JOb — AJ+ (@ajplus) July 2, 2020
Energy #prices plunged by 12.2% in April, following the 3.7% drop in March. By contrast, food prices climbed sharply to 4.2% in April, from 2.4% in March, the largest annual increase since Jan. 2012, no doubt a consequence of #COVID19. More #OECD #stats👉https://t.co/AMSnwHMWVo pic.twitter.com/CZKxDf5NTe
— OECD Statistics (@OECD_Stat) June 3, 2020
Trump suspending temporary work visas for the rest of the year, in a pandemic, and crashed economy, is insane and extremely racist but not unexpected.
Your food prices are going to skyrocket and the economy is going to get far worse. — Contented Independent (@ContentedIndie) June 20, 2020
A whole new way to grocery shop pic.twitter.com/HWcfqoZu8M
— Mashable (@mashable) July 5, 2020
We were out there for that 7 year old girl. We need funding for our public schools, mental health facilities, we need grocery stores, nurses & social workers in our schools, we neee jobs. What we don’t need is more police! Defund what we don’t need & fund what we need! pic.twitter.com/Nkvyu94U6x
— Anthony V. Clark (@anthonyvclark20) July 6, 2020
U.S. online grocery shopping hits record $7.2 billion in June https://t.co/qNiuPpIqAf by @sarahintampa
— TechCrunch (@TechCrunch) July 6, 2020
I know there’s been a lot of outrage over my modest proposal that we harvest poor people’s infants for meat during this period of rising food prices but honestly it makes you look ignorant for refusing to debate with me in the marketplace of ideas.
— Lethality Jane (@LethalityJane) June 4, 2020
More than 12% of Americans lived in areas commonly known as “food deserts” in 2015
During the pandemic, public transportation reductions, rising food prices and gaps in online grocery access have made it even harder for these residents to buy groceries https://t.co/eiBvaHd3kK — Nathaniel Meyersohn (@nmeyersohn) June 9, 2020
The #coronavirus pandemic led to the fastest-rising food prices since the 1970s.
👉🏻 https://t.co/vhBnIyriC3 pic.twitter.com/Gtznye3laU — Frank Luntz (@FrankLuntz) June 15, 2020
Yeah the whole “closed for 2 weeks for cleaning” for restaurants (and @MLB parks) is theater. Complete waste of resources. YOU GET IT FROM OTHER PEOPLE. FULL STOP.
— Melon Usk (@1LoafOfMeat) July 5, 2020
Rosanne Cash’s daughter was called a “liberal pussy!” in Nashville for wearing a mask to buy groceries. That insult succinctly conveys the crux of the problem. American leadership has politicized the pandemic instead of trying to fight it.https://t.co/oSoUqnbRK4
— Scott Galloway (@profgalloway) July 6, 2020
Judge did consider the ongoing #Covid_19 pandemic instead of issuing a higher sentence of up to 6 to 8 years. The former tuna CEO must also pay a $100,000 fine. (2/2)
— Victoria Graham (@vgraham27) June 16, 2020
* Timeline summaries at the top of the page come from a variety of sources:, including The American Journal of Managed Care COVID-19 Timeline (https://www.ajmc.com/view/a-timeline-of-covid19-developments-in-2020), the Just Security Group at the NYU School of Law (https://www.justsecurity.org/69650/timeline-of-the-coronavirus-pandemic-and-u-s-response/), the “10 Things,” daily entries from The Week (theweek.com), as well as a variety of newspapers and television programs.