“The law essentially bans price discrimination, making it illegal for suppliers to offer preferential deals and for retailers to demand them.” But it has not been enforced since the 1980s.
Reposted from
Stacy Mitchell
1. The conventional explanation for food deserts—that these places are too poor or too rural to generate enough spending on groceries, or too Black to overcome racist corporate redlining — fail to grapple with a key fact: food deserts didn’t used to exist. My new piece in The Atlantic.
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