The neoliberal diet and inequality in the United States
Digital Document
| Content type |
Content type
|
|---|---|
| Collection(s) |
Collection(s)
|
| Resource Type |
Resource Type
|
| Genre |
Genre
|
| Peer Review Status |
Peer Review Status
Peer Reviewed
|
| Origin Information |
|
|---|
| Persons |
Author (aut): Otero, G.
Author (aut): Pechlaner, Gabriela
Author (aut): Lieberman, Giselle
Author (aut): Gurcan, E Can
|
|---|
| Abstract |
Abstract
This paper discusses increasing differentiation of U.S. dietary components by socioeconomic strata and its health implications. While upper-income groups have had increasing access to higher-quality foods, lower-to-middle-income class diets are heavily focused on “energy-dense” fares. This neoliberal diet is clearly associated with the proliferation of obesity that disproportionately affects the poor. We provide a critical review of the debate about obesity from within the critical camp in food studies, between individual-focused and structural perspectives. Using official data, we show how the US diet has evolved since the 1960s to a much greater emphasis on refined carbohydrates and vegetable oils. Inequality is demonstrated by dividing the population into households-income quintiles and how they spend on food. We then introduce our Neoliberal Diet Risk Index (NDR), comprised of measures of food-import dependency, the Gini coefficient, rates of urbanization, female labor-force participation, and economic globalization. Our index serves to measure the risk of exposure to the neoliberal diet comparatively, across time and between nations. We conclude that only a societal actor like the state can redirect the food-production system by modifying its agricultural subsidy policies. Inequality-reducing policies will make the healthier food involved in such change widely available for all. |
|---|---|
| Language |
Language
|
| Publication Title |
Publication Title
|
|---|---|
| Publication Number |
Publication Number
Volume 142
|
| Publication Identifier |
Publication Identifier
issn: 0277-9536
|
| DOI |
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.08.005
|
|---|---|
| ISSN |
ISSN
0277-9536
|
| PubMed Central Reference Number |
PubMed Central Reference Number
26282708
|
| Use and Reproduction |
Use and Reproduction
http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/issn/0277-9536/
|
|---|---|
| Rights Statement |
Rights Statement
|
| Use License |
| Keywords |
Keywords
Obesity; Inequality; Food; Nutrition; Diet; Neoliberalism; Health inequalities
|
|---|