Intro to Business

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Date Submitted: 11/09/2015 02:04 PM

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Bonus cases

Bonus case 9-5

FOOD MARKETING IN THE INNER CITY

In many cases food marketers don’t even try to sell products for the health-conscious in low-income neighborhoods. Businesses both big and small thus contribute to the cycle of poor nutrition in the inner city. A spokesperson for Kraft General Foods said, “We aren’t a miniature Health and Human Services Department. A company doesn’t have a social obligation to instruct consumers on the best way to handle their health.”

At the Friendly Pal supermarket in Brooklyn, the Continental Baking delivery person puts up lots of Wonder bread and two small loaves of whole wheat and another two of light wheat. The salesperson says, “Whole wheat is for the old people, light wheat is for the skinny people, and all this white bread, it’s for the fat people.” In low-income Bedford Stuyvesant, only 25 of 149 small grocers carry low-fat milk. A store across the street from one of Chicago’s low-income housing projects offers only two cartons of low-fat milk and two cartons of skim. The store sells lots of Snickers, Coke and Frito Lay products, beer, and cigarettes.

In Harlem, Little Debbie’s cupcakes sell like hotcakes. One Harlem storeowner tried stocking his store with fresh fruits and vegetables and Del Monte fruit in light syrup. His peaches, grapes, lettuce, and tomatoes were ignored. Now he sells just potatoes and bananas.

Although African-Americans suffer more from hypertension, for which doctors prescribe low-salt diets, the Special Request line of low-sodium soups from Campbell is hard to find in the inner city where many African-Americans live. Campbell soup says it is easier to fish where the fish are and doesn’t try to promote its more nutritious soup to inner-city people.

Many supermarket chains have abandoned inner cities and have left the market to smaller stores that charge between 10% and 20% more for the same food. This isn’t a rip-off of consumers as much as a...