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http://www.alternet.org/story/31260/

 

Natural Food, Unnatural Prices

 

By Stan Cox, AlterNet. Posted January 25, 2006.

 

 

 

Is it possible to eat well without breaking the bank? Our

correspondent goes shopping at Whole Foods and comes away hungry.

 

 

Roaming the parking lot of a San Antonio shopping center last month,

my wife Priti and I came upon a Whole Foods Market. I couldn't resist

hitting the brakes. For years, from our home in Kansas, we'd been

reading and hearing about this king-of-the-hill among natural food

retailers, and we wanted to see what all the fuss was about.

 

I found a parking spot between an Outback and a Prius. In moments, we

had left the land of steel and asphalt behind and stepped into a world

of biological wonders. The robust-looking bread, in all the right

shades of toasty brown, was clearly far more than an inert

sandwich-support medium; even the few lonely white-bread specimens

looked good. The fruits and vegetables actually looked and smelled

like fruits and vegetables. The bulk bins formed a solid base for the

best of food pyramids. In the deli and packaged-food sections, it was

an invigorating experience simply to read the labels.

 

The work day was just starting, and the employees, most of them

anyway, were genuinely friendly and seemingly delighted with their lot

in life -- to be young, healthy and working at Whole Foods. These

" team members, " as they're known in company lingo, have signed on with

a major-league powerhouse. With 180 stores in the United States,

Canada and the United Kingdom, annual sales of $4.6 billion and

profits of $160 million, Whole Foods recently moved into the Fortune 500.

 

But then we started looking around for something to buy. As we stared

bug-eyed at the lofty price tags, I wondered aloud what sort of income

it would take to become a regular Whole Foods shopper. Priti had an

idea: Why not give Whole Foods the Wal-Mart test?

 

Return of the cashier-shopper

 

Priti was referring to a June 2003 AlterNet article in which I asked

this seemingly simple question: In view of Wal-Mart's vast range of

merchandise and " Always Low Prices, " could a family whose breadwinner

worked at the Wal-Mart Supercenter in Salina, Kan., afford to supply

its minimum needs by shopping there?

 

I'd relied on published studies that computed the cost of an " adequate

but austere " life for a family with one adult and two children in

Salina. The budget included only the basics: shelter, transportation,

food, routine toiletries and medicines, and not much more. Housing and

transportation can't be bought at Wal-Mart (yet), but almost all other

necessities can be.

 

The bottom line: Our Wal-Mart cashier could not satisfy such a

bare-survival budget even if she worked 40 hours per week, more hours

than a typical Wal-Mart workweek. And as you might expect, in trying

to keep the family within such a budget, I condemned them to an array

of foods that were boring, unappealing, and not very nutritious -- and

produced in ways that most customers would prefer not to know about.

 

But is that inevitable? Or is the nation's corporate food system

capable of supplying people at all income levels with products of the

quality we saw at Whole Foods?

 

Salina to San Antonio

 

I took Priti up on her suggestion, moving the hypothetical family from

Salina to San Antonio, and having my cashier work and buy groceries at

Whole Foods. I used the same list of foods -- a minimal,

USDA-recommended " low-cost food plan " -- that I'd used at the Salina

Wal-Mart.

 

Back at Whole Foods, we followed the same simulated-shopping rules,

selecting the cheapest food in each food category and the cheapest

brand of that type. Using those prices, I computed the monthly cost of

feeding an adult female, a 12-year-old boy and a 4-year-old child.

 

At Salina's Wal-Mart, the bill had been $232, plus sales tax. At Whole

Foods, the same basket of food cost $564. Texas has no sales tax on

food, and Whole Foods employees get a 20 percent discount, bringing

the cost for the San Antonio cashier all the way down to $451. That

monthly price tag includes only the cheapest foods in each category,

and none of the store's popular luxury items.

 

The starting wage for a cashier at Salina's Wal-Mart in 2003 was

$6.25, which fell $146 per month short of meeting her family's

survival budget. Whole Foods employees in three states told me that a

starting cashier's wages tend to be between $7 and $8, but according

to Whole Foods spokesperson Ashley Hawkins, a poll of all company

regions showed a starting wage of $8 to $10.

 

Let's assume that the cost of nonfood necessities in present-day San

Antonio is similar to Salina circa 2003 (although it's undoubtedly

higher, and the San Antonio cashier might not have access to the full

day-care subsidy that low-income Kansas workers get). A $10-per-hour

employee determined to shop at Whole Foods could manage to do so. An

$8-per-hour employee could meet the bare-survival food budget, but

with nothing left over. At $7, she would miss the mark by more than

the Wal-Mart cashier-shopper. The situation would be worse in a state

like Kansas that taxes food sales.

 

Hawkins says Whole Foods' full-time turnover rate is 24.7 percent, so

the above wages would apply to approximately one-fourth of employees.

She says the companywide average wage is $15, and that health care,

401(k), stock option and stock purchase plans (after about 10-12

months' employment) have helped earn Whole Foods a place on Fortune

magazine's list of the " 100 best companies to work for " for the past

nine years.

 

Blinded by uniqueness

 

But not all employees agree with Fortune's assessment. Jeremy Plague

was among the Madison, Wis., Whole Foods employees who managed to form

a union (the only one in the company's history) for a period between

2002 and 2004, eventually succumbing to Whole Foods' fierce anti-union

policies.

 

Says Plague, " In my experience, most people really liked working at

Whole Foods for the first few months, blinded by the uniqueness of the

store and by their hippie rhetoric of how we all mattered. But then

people hit the six-month wall where they realize that it's all a bunch

of BS, and Whole Foods is just like every other money-hungry

corporation … It's all a great, worker- and environment-friendly

system until you get to the actual people working in the stores,

stocking the shelves and ringing you up at the register. "

 

A website created by the Madison organizing effort,

wholeworkersunite.org, remains active as a gathering place for current

and former Whole Foods employees critical of company policies.

 

Critics of my cashier-shopper analysis argue that jobs with retailers

like Whole Foods or Wal-Mart aren't meant to support families. But to

the extent that that's true, neither employer can be viewed as a model

for the economy at large. And given the wage and price policies of the

two companies, one thing is clear: Customers who frequent Whole Foods

are unlikely to be Wal-Mart cashiers or other low-income earners.

 

Whole Foods CEO John Mackey is frank about that. He recently told The

Independent (UK), " You can't have it both ways. If you want the

highest quality, it costs more. It's like complaining that a BMW is

more expensive than a Hyundai. Yes, but you're getting a better car. "

 

And few Whole Foods Markets are situated in economy-car country. Of

the 170 stores in the U.S., none are located in zip codes with average

2003 household incomes at or below $31,000 -- the approximate income

earned by a full-time employee earning the average Whole Foods wage.

 

Only nine of the 170 stores are in zip codes with incomes of $43,300

or lower. That was the median income in the United States that year

(that is, half of U.S. households had incomes lower, and half of them

higher, than $43,300).

 

Half of the zip codes with Whole Foods stores lie above $72,000 in

average income. A fourth of them exceed $100,000.

 

Mackey's defense of high prices is mirrored in Wal-Mart CEO Lee

Scott's defense of his company's low wages, which he summed up in an

address to employees last October: " I ask anyone to do the math. Even

slight overall adjustments to wages eliminate our thin profit margin. "

And, said Scott, price increases are out of the question because even

as it is, " our customers simply don't have the money to buy

necessities between paychecks. "

 

Is it possible for a corporation that sells everyday, necessary

products like food to do three things at once: (1) pay a living wage,

(2) charge prices that most people can afford and (3) provide an

acceptable return to its shareholders?

 

Clearly, Wal-Mart gives top priority to shareholders. Then come

customers and, bringing up the rear, workers. As expected, its degrees

of success follow in that same order, with workers sacrificed to

satisfy the first two priorities. But what would happen to its wages

and prices if Wal-Mart, notorious for putting the price squeeze on its

suppliers, were to commit itself to marketing only sustainably

produced, high-quality goods?

 

And, returning to Whole Foods, the same question can be put another

way: Does it manage to make the list of " best companies to work for "

only because of the premium prices paid by its customers? How would

Whole Foods' merchandise quality, pay and benefits look if it tried to

match Wal-Mart's customer base, maybe not in size but in socioeconomic

diversity?

 

Whole-food, nonmarket solutions

 

Many academics and grassroots activists in the sustainable-agriculture

movement are asking those kinds of questions, doing some hard thinking

about how society can pay farmers (preferably noncorporate farmers)

adequately to raise nutritious food in less ecologically destructive

ways while keeping the end products affordable for all.

 

Clearly, our hypothetical cashiers, wherever they work, would benefit

from having their own vegetable garden. But unless, against all odds,

they also managed to raise a lot of staple foods on their own --

wheat, dry beans, maybe some chickens or dairy animals -- or had

plenty of time for fishing, they would still be largely reliant on

purchased food of some kind.

 

Like many in her profession, Rhonda Janke, associate professor of

horticulture and a sustainable cropping systems specialist at Kansas

State University, is a big advocate of locally produced food, farmers'

markets and community supported agriculture, or CSA. (In a typical CSA

arrangement, consumers contract with a farmer in their area to deliver

a certain quantity of food on an agreed schedule during the growing

season. The kinds of foods delivered depends on what's in season.)

 

As for making good, locally produced food affordable, Janke notes that

" many CSAs have provisions for 'work shares' and reduced cost shares

for low-income families, and that can be part of a 'local safety net'.

But that doesn't eliminate the need for the grower to get full price

from a minimum number of full-paying customers. "

 

Janke asks, " What do you consider a living wage for a farmer, and does

that make the price of food go up? If all farmers got $10 per hour,

not counting [federal subsidies], what would food cost? Would the

price at Wal-Mart go up? Whole Foods? "

 

She believes that leaving it up to the big retailers would put food

out of reach for a lot of people: " I think the only conclusion one can

logically come to is that market forces alone are not going to provide

enough healthy food to everyone in our society. "

 

In that spirit, a growing number of pioneering nonprofit organizations

are working to put good food within economic reach of their local

communities. One of them is People's Grocery in Oakland, Calif. The

nonprofit, community-based organization sells fresh produce and

staples through its store and Mobile Market -- a " grocery store on

wheels " that travels through West Oakland making regular stops. The

organization also has extensive educational programs and has helped

establish a growing network of community gardens that currently

provide 25 percent of the produce it sells.

 

I asked co-founder Brahm Ahmadi what makes it possible for People's

Grocery to sell good, natural food that low-income families can

afford, while Whole Foods can't. He said the fundamental difference is

that " they're pursuing profit and we aren't. "

 

Ahmadi says good food doesn't have to be expensive. " Because of its

huge size, Whole Foods receives a deeper discount from its suppliers

than any other natural-food retailer. Yet the prices in its stores are

among the most expensive. They are purely profit-driven, so they do

not allow that cost benefit to go to the customer. "

 

Once, says Ahmadi, a Whole Foods executive told him, " We could not

market food the way you do, because our shareholders simply wouldn't

allow it. "

 

People's Grocery subsidizes its efforts through charitable funding,

with the understanding that the donated money will go to hold prices

down. But as the low-income market strengthens, says Ahmadi, People's

Grocery will try to reduce its dependency on contributions by

marketing food that it obtains directly from producers, cutting out as

many steps of the expensive supply chain as possible.

 

The growth of the natural-food industry may have been phenomenal in

recent years, but Ahmadi predicts that its relatively affluent target

market cannot avoid saturation: " Companies will have to project what

new markets they can turn to. And there's substantial growth potential

among low-income shoppers. They account for almost half of food retail

in the U.S. -- that's $85 billion. "

 

Indirectly echoing Rhonda Janke's conclusion that " market forces alone

are not enough, " Ahmadi says, " We need to build demand that can thrive

and grow on its own, " but in low-income areas " it has to be done

differently. It requires a grassroots approach with community

organizations that have track records. "

 

And community organizations working in not-so-posh urban zip codes

from coast to coast are establishing just such track records. They

include, among others, Garden-Raised Bounty in Olympia, Wash., Growing

Power in Milwaukee and Added Value in Brooklyn, N.Y.

 

But a more thoroughgoing overhaul of the nation's food systems may be

needed to reach the majority of city dwellers, as well as vast, less

densely populated rural regions between the coasts. Of the 500 poorest

counties in the United States, more than 450 are rural. Ironically, it

is in highly productive, ecologically threatened agricultural regions

that sustainably produced, nutritious food is least widely available.

 

To organizations like People's Grocery, it's unacceptable that such

food is accessible to some families and not to others simply on the

basis of where they live or how much they earn. As Brahm Ahmadi puts

it, " We're not talking about a luxury item here. Good food is a basic

need. "

 

Stan Cox is a plant breeder and writer in Salina, Kan.

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