U of I College
of ACES
Grant project studies how food retailers work with food banks
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[July 06, 2020]
Food banks help alleviate food
insecurity, and their contribution has become increasingly important
during the COVID-19 pandemic. Food banks receive supplies from many
sources, including major food retailers, but little is known about
their role in the food supply chain.
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A team of researchers received a $500,000 grant from the USDA
National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) to study the
relationship among food retailers, food banks, and food
security.
“In this innovative project, we intend to figure out how the
retail food sector intersects with the charitable food
assistance sector. In other words, how the retail food sector
supplies food to foodbank,” says Craig Gundersen, distinguished
professor of agricultural and consumer economics in the College
of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences at the
University of Illinois, and co-principal investigator on the
project.
Gundersen says food banks get their supplies from different
sources. They purchase items such as rice, beans, fruits and
vegetables at discounted rates from wholesalers. They also
receive donations from individuals as well as from major
retailers such as Walmart or Meijer.
The grant project will study how food retailers' decisions to
discount, donate, or discard perishable food products affect
food banks. The researchers will combine retail scanner data
with data on foodbank donations and food insecurity data
generated by Feeding America through their Map the Meal Gap (MMG)
data initiative.
Gundersen works with Feeding America as lead researcher on MMG,
which provides detailed data on local, regional, and national
food insecurity. He developed data collection methods and models
to estimate food-insecurity rates that comprise the MMG reports.
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“Understanding the relationship between the retail
food sector and the food banks is especially important during
COVID-19,” Gundersen says.
“The pandemic has increased food insecurity and also strained the
food supply chains with occasional food shortages in retail stores.
If the retail food sector is running low on food, it also means food
banks are running low on food.”
Timothy Richards at Arizona State University leads the grant
project, which includes researches from Illinois, The Ohio State
University, and California Polytechnic State University.
The study aims to further understanding of food banks in relation to
the food retail industry, food waste, and food security, and to
provide policy recommendations on how to support and strengthen the
interaction between food retailers and food banks.
[Source: Craig Gundersen
Writer: Marianne Stein] |