Private Sector Blog: Ending poverty...through supermarkets?
...A new paper from the University of Chicago business school suggests that stores like Walmart have helped dampen the growth of inequality in the U.S. by reducing the prices faced by the poor. Christian Broda, one of the authors,
sums it up over at Vox:
The expansion of superstores – like Wal-Mart and Target – has also played an important role in accounting for the inflation differentials between rich and poor. Superstores sell the same products as traditional shops at much lower prices. Today the poor do roughly twice as much of their buying of non-durable goods in these stores than the rich. So poor consumers have been the biggest beneficiaries of Wal-Mart coming to town.
Supermarkets tend to charge consumers lower prices and offer more diverse products and higher quality than traditional retailers - these competitive advantages allow them to spread quickly...The food price savings accrue first to the middle class, but as supermarkets spread into the food markets of the urban poor and into rural towns, they have positive food security impacts on poor consumers.
However, it is interesting to see that the discourse on supermarkets follows the same contours as the debate around Walmart. Reardon and Gulati spend much of the paper discussing the potential negative impacts that the spread of supermarkets could have on traditional retailers, which dovetails with the 'less sanguine' take about Walmart that I pointed to earlier in this post. ...
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