This very thing happened in the town I grew up in. Dollar General moved in and no more than five years later the local grocery store, which had been there since the 60's, closed down. Pretty sad really. Now residents have to drive 20mims to the next town over to get fresh fruit/veggies/meats. I'm honestly glad I moved away to a bigger city.
Not from the US and not super familiar with dollar stores, so/but this was a fascinating watch. Terrible how they drive independent grocers out of business in small towns and their role in urban food deserts is interesting and horrifying.
I can't imagine having no access to fresh food. I live in a European city and in a 500 meter radius I probably have ten places where I can buy some sort of vegetable, fruit, dairy product, fresh bread, etc. Not to mention countless restaurants where I can also eat.
What I did wonder: in poor urban areas in the US, are there no small shops catering mostly to immigrants? In most places I've lived there are quite a few smaller shops that have products (including produce) from specific regions where many residents of the area are from. So like a Turkish bakery or some shop run by Colombians I sometimes go to that has plantains and queso fresco and stuff. I would think that especially in the US with so many immigrants you would have loads of those kinds of shops.
I think one thing to keep in mind is how absolutely MASSIVE the US is -- even the smallest state in the US is larger than a handful of European countries.
It's very common for people to live a 30+ minute drive from cities and/or their workplace, and in these more rural areas, it can be unsustainable to open small shops, because of reduced traffic...and people are shopping at the "super centers" in the city.
I think one thing even more important to keep in mind is how completely irrelevant the US's massive size is. It doesn't fucking matter that there are empty states out west or long distances between cities; the vast majority of people still live within metro areas and that's not any different from Europe.
Edit: to be clear, I'm not trying to attack @neopenguin in particular here. It's just that lots of people make that ignorant argument, and like the guy who created the video I linked, I'm sick and tired of seeing it. Stop upvoting ignorance!
Yeah that's a fair point and I understand this is the case in more rural areas, but what about Atlanta like discussed in the video? There you would have loads of people living in a certain area and although they might not have a lot of money, wouldn't their desire to buy the foods and products of where they're from be a lifeline for these small shops?
In many European cities there are supermarkets but also smaller greengrocers, also (or even especially) in poorer neighbourhoods with a high immigrant population.
I don't understand why the economics for those shops would be different in the US and why you wouldn't have them in less economically developed areas in cities such as Atlanta. Perhaps because dollar stores don't really exist here, but here they need to compete with bigger supermarket chains that do operate in all parts of the city.
I live in a European city and in a 500 meter radius I probably have ten places where I can buy some sort of vegetable, fruit, dairy product, fresh bread, etc.
In my American city, in a 500 meter walking distance there's literally nothing but single-family houses, churches, and a school. It is prohibited by law for there to be anything else! (I say "walking distance" instead of "radius" because there are stores on the other side of the freeway, but if you can't get to them they don't count, right?)
What I did wonder: in poor urban areas in the US, are there no small shops catering mostly to immigrants?
Sure, if there are allowed to be (see previous paragraph). Otherwise, shops catering mostly to immigrants have to be located on the main stroad and poor immigrants have got to drive to them just like everybody else. (Or take one of the private bus services that sometimes exist to cater to those areas.)
in poor urban areas in the US, are there no small shops catering mostly to immigrants?
I grew up in a city where most of my peers qualified for free or reduced school lunches.
There were no immigrant shops because there were few to no immigrants. None of the major grocery stores were even in the city limits because they were evading city taxes. It was only a 10-15 minute drive, but that requires you to have a car. The smaller local grocery stores in my neighborhood pretty much all closed shop between the 80s & 00s, and they had already been gone from other neighborhoods before then. They were also always more expensive than the larger stores, but, again, those required driving.
There are local stores catering to different immigrant populations where I am now, but there are populationz to support them. They would still require a car to get to.
In rural areas, there is only really the economy for one or two grocery stores. Dollar General can enter a town of that size, something that Walmart couldn't do. There isn't the market diversity for an immigrant grocery stores.
Love the city clickers in these threads calling DG the devil. I clearly see the harm in placing them in cities. But I can clearly see the benefit of placing them in the boonies. Guarantee that any replies to this post will tell me exactly which locale that person lives in. Hint: You won't find us rural people bitching about a new DG moving in.
I'm on the very edge of town and the new DG was a godsend. 6-miles to a mildly overpriced supermarket. I can walk to DG faster. Plus, there are a lot of poor people here who can't afford cars. You'll see them walking and biking with DG bags everywhere. What else are they to do?
"But they're killing rural mom-and-pop stores!"
Are they? All I see in the countryside is a DG with nothing else around for miles and miles and miles.
Funny anecdote on that; I have a camp outside Holt, FL, pop. 2,400 (and that covers a lot of ground).
There are exactly 2 places to purchase goods, mom-and-pop gas station/general store and DG. The home-grown store is in zero danger, they're jam packed.
Come take a 12-hour drive through the South's back highways with me, let's see what you think.