A Combined Kroger And Albertsons Could Contribute to Hunger, the Opposite of What You’d Expect
Jenn McMillen CLMP
I Build Kickass Loyalty, CX & CRM Programs for All Types of Companies | Loyalty & CRM Industry Expert | Forbes.com Retail Contributor | WBENC Certified (WBE) | Speaker | Advisor | LinkedIn Expert | RetailWire Brain Trust
Those of us who can afford grocery delivery should be grateful for it. Because the nation’s largest possible supermarket merger could otherwise force many Americans to travel miles, and pay more, for healthy food.
This is a likely outcome, experts predict, if federal regulators approve the pending alliance between retail giants Kroger and Albertsons. The combined companies would form a $24.6 billion megamarket chain of nearly 5,000 stores. But for many people in the U.S., it is feared, the stores will be “regulated” out of reach.
This is among many serious concerns the potential combination presents for consumers, including the likelihood it will result in job losses (due to store consolidations) and higher food prices (because fewer companies will control a lion’s share of the market).
But the real kick-in-the-pants is a combined Kroger-Albertsons is likely to worsen the presence of food deserts in poor urban areas, a major national challenge. And this risk alone should cause regulators to rethink such big alliances and cast a hairy eyeball on the promises merging companies make – about lower prices, economies of scale, promoting competition, etc.
Laying The Groundwork For A Desert
After all, a combined Kroger-Albertsons (Krolbertsons?) would control nearly one-fifth of the U.S. grocery market , The Guardian estimates. In markets where both chains operate stores, the numbers may be too high to pass muster with federal regulators who may require the chains to unload a number of locations.
Sure enough, as a pre-emptive sweetener, Kroger and Albertsons have said they plan to sell some stores to rivals, and would consider spinning off 100 to 375 stores into a separate company, according to The New York Times.
Yet this, history shows, is one way food deserts start.
“Supermarket mergers drive out smaller, mom-and-pop grocers and regional chains,” Amanda Starbuck, policy analyst at Food & Water Watch, told The Guardian in 2021 . “We have roughly one-third fewer grocery stores today than we did 25 years ago, according to the US census bureau.”
But what are food deserts? Food deserts are areas that are absent of convenient options for affordable, healthy foods, including fresh fruits and vegetables. They tend to exist in poor communities and make it difficult for families, children in particular, to maintain good health and growth.
Among the health and safety concerns stemming from a diet without healthy options: People who live in food deserts are at a heightened risk for obesity , diabetes and cardiovascular disease, Science Daily reports. The cost of these health conditions trickles down to all Americans – obesity costs the U.S. health system $173 billion a year , the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports.
And nearly?39.5?million people lived in low-access food areas in 2017, according to the USDA’s most recent?food access research report .
Some History About Mergers And Food Deserts
Among the major supermarket mergers that have played a role in forming some of these food wastelands is one involving Albertsons, as documented in its buyout of Safeway in 2015.
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To gain approval by federal regulators, Albertsons and Safeway had to divest 168 locations in the west. A small chain called Haggen Foods & Pharmacy purchased 146 of them.
However, Haggen was “woefully underequipped ” for the task of ramping up so many stores, and filed for bankruptcy protection within a year, The American Prospect reports. In addition to the store closings related to that failure, Albertsons had closed at least 160 additional supermarkets nationwide, post-merger. This triggered major layoffs and hurt nearby businesses, states a report by the Colorado Trust .
It’s reasonable to expect that of the 100 to 375 stores Kroger and Albertsons offer to spin off, a good number may go dark for good.
As Stacy Mitchell, a co-executive director of the non-profit Institute for Local Self-Reliance, told the Guardian: “It’s highly likely if [this merger] goes through it will result in more communities not having a grocery store.”
It’s Time To Innovate For Tomorrow, Non-Food Retailers
Unless.
What if non-grocery merchants, from the dollar chains and convenience stores to consignment shops and the Salvation Army, stepped into these desert communities to provide the healthy foods (not junk foods) families need?
The Salvation Army did in fact do this , in Baltimore, Grocery Dive reports. And convenience store chains including 7-Eleven have been expanding their healthy options in select markets. Ditto for the dollar chains, such as Family Dollar and Dollar General , CNN has reported.?
In addition to opening locations near colleges and up-and-coming areas, retailers can work with state and local officials to open accessible stores in food-challenged communities.
There are a few watch-outs, however:
If federal regulators approve it, the Kroger-Albertsons deal is expected to close in 2024. That gives retailers, regulators and communities less than two years to make the proposal work for everyone, including low-income families and retail workers.
We should speak up now for a deal that nourishes all, not just investors and corporate executives.
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1 年I think this is sickening. I used to live in Las Vegas and saw firsthand the negative effects these mergers have in areas that are "lower income". The Albertsons on Washington near Decatur and Washington near Sahara closed because the chain wanted to "lower it's prices". Not coincidentally, even more Albertsons in Black and Latino/Mexican/Puerto Rican communities closed, creating food deserts. People in those areas were left with 3 options: pay higher prices at Walmart, or buy subpar foods and NOT fresh produce at nearby Food 4 Less stores, or buy rotting, fly-ridden produce and questionable meats at the nearby "$.99" Stores. The closest "decent" store with fresh, not rotten/rotting produce and a decent variety of healthy organic food was the Smiths Food King on Rancho and Charleston, about an hour ride by bus (one-way). Execs and stockholders of both chains know it will create MORE "food deserts"; they know it will require people to travel further and further out of their area to get to the nearest grocery store. They just don't give a damn. It's painfully obvious that this merger is only driven by GREED, and their only loyalty is to the "Almighty dollar" and NOT to US, their customers.
Founding Partner/ Lead Digital Copywriter, Editor, Proofreader, RFP Consultant, Executive Coach/ Mentor, Business Development Executive and Published Columnist
1 年This soon to be rubber stamped merger will be great for Kroger's shareholders, senior executives and AWFUL for its employees, customers and the smaller, independent stores. With less competition, prices will rise, service will suffer (Kroger stores near me aren't exactly stellar at providing it) and food desert communities will become even more desolate. GUARANTEED!
Member at Rocky River Civil Service Commission
1 年I agree with
employed
1 年Kroger and Albertsons are a perfect example of groceries stores that are consolidating to minimize competition from perhaps mom and pop grocery stores. I think this deal is really to maximize profits for shareholders of the combined company as well as making the CEO's wealthier since a lot of CEO's pay is based on the increase of stock value.. With less competition, the more prices will go up. This is just a public relations blitz by both companies to try to justify combining. A number of politicians, especially Elizabeth Warren, US Senator to Massachusetts is trying to plead with federal regulators to keep this merger deal from going through.
Farm to Table Food Systems Design and Support
1 年The US food system is a failure leaving tens of millions without access to markets.