Originally Posted by Roody
I wonder how much that would raise food prices, and who would suffer most from it.
But you there's definitely something wrong with the current system. For example, coffee and bananas are both shipped a long way by boat, and then trucked much further from the port of entry to the local market. But they're two of the cheapest items at the supermarket. Local growers, who bring produce by van to a nearby farmer's market--only a few miles--tell me that shipping is a big part of their costs. Why is this? If we stopped subsidizing long-distance shipping, would it make sense to start subsidizing local transport of goods?
To me it would make the most sense to give money (or better jobs) to the people who can't afford food, rather than subsidize the agribusinesses.