Rising costs of fruit and vegetables hit the Philadelphia Wholesale Produce Market

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Daily News | Rising costs of fruit and vegetables hit the Philadelphia Wholesale Produce Market

due to the Great Resignation, the rise in U.S. wages, and falling immigration.

The federal government increased SNAP benefits 27% last fall for more than 40 million Americans, boosting the payments to $835 a month for a family of four. “That’s really helped, that their SNAP cards are loaded,” Kovacevich said. But the current trend has been toward supplier delivery, which forces the produce dealers to invest more in trucks, and squeezes out the old-timers who insist they’re not in the hauling business. From 27 owners when the current market location opened 11 years ago, just 20 larger dealers operate there now.

He points to a box of Asian pears from self-pollinating trees, which has increased their growing area and cut costs. He’s looking forward to more and better mass-market produce.Michael Lombardo, one of the partners, is calculating how shipping costs are pressuring the market for mangoes, “the number-one fruit consumed worldwide, except in this country” which Pinto sells in increasingly diverse varieties to area markets.

Shifting costs could bring back wooden boxes, which Lombardo said are much better for the sweetest kinds of green beans than cardboard, or plastic, which “doesn’t breathe.” The culprit, again, is “Amazon. They’re buying up all the cardboard for Amazon Prime,” the same-day delivery service.

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PhillyJoeD And yes, we know that it's going to hit minorities harder than wealthier people, especially when food deserts become food desert planets like in 'The Mandolorian'.

PhillyJoeD This was an interesting read.

PhillyJoeD Are we sure greed isn’t a big reason?

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