4.4 Article

Measuring Food Access and Food Deserts for Policy Purposes

Journal

APPLIED ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES AND POLICY
Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 205-225

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1093/aepp/ppu035

Keywords

Policy targeting; food deserts; food access; poverty

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Policymakers have dedicated increasing attention to whether Americans have access to healthful food. As a result, various methods for measuring food store access at the national level have been developed to identify areas that lack access. However, these methods face definitional, data, and methodological limitations. The focus on neighborhoods instead of individuals underestimates the barriers that some individuals face in accessing healthy food, and overestimates the problem in other neighborhoods. This paper reviews and critiques currently available national-level measures of food access. While multiple measures of food access are needed to understand the problem, we recommend greater attention be paid to individual measures of food store access.

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