"For every dollar we spend on food, only about 16 cents goes to the
farmer. The other 84 cents go towards what economists call 'marketing,'
which refers not to commercials and advertising, but the entire chain
that ensures food makes it from farm to plate," begins THIS CNN article.
"Today, nearly all our meals arrive in our neighborhoods via supermarkets
(or supercenters, the term for operations like Walmart and Target that
also sell groceries). Those two kinds of stores sell about 80 percent of
our food. Walmart, the biggest supermarket in the country, sells
roughly one-quarter of the food bought in the U.S., making it the
largest grocer in our history (and that of the world)."
“'The misconception is that we're in the retail business,' Jay
Fitzsimmons, a senior vice president and treasurer for Walmart, told
investors in 2003. But in reality, 'We're in the distribution business.'”
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