Understanding real food

Articles, research, and stories about farming, food systems, and the people growing our food.

This USDA toolkit pulls together real-world case studies from across the U.S. and shows local governments how to measure the economic impact of farmers’ markets, food hubs, CSAs, and similar projects. The examples consistently show that when communities shift purchasing toward local producers, they see higher job creation, more local business income, and stronger tax bases than if the same money flows out to national chains and far-away suppliers. It’s basically a playbook for proving that local food is economic development, not charity.

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This USDA report looks at thousands of U.S. farms that sell through local channels like farmers’ markets, CSAs, and sales to schools and restaurants. It finds that farms focused on local buyers can be financially healthy at many different sizes—not just huge “big ag” operations. In plain English: selling locally isn’t just a feel-good move; it can be a real business model that keeps family farms alive and money circulating in nearby towns.

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This New York study looked at different sizes of farms that participate in local food systems and modeled their ripple effects across the regional economy. It found that local-oriented producers can generate more local income and value added per dollar of output than larger, export-oriented farms. In simple terms: a dollar spent on food from nearby farms tends to “bounce around” locally more times—through wages, services, and other small businesses—than a dollar spent on food shipped in from big national suppliers.

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This national nonprofit pulls together research from multiple states and sums it up in plain language: farms that sell locally create far more jobs per dollar of sales than farms that sell into large wholesale channels. One highlighted study shows that direct-marketing farms create almost three times as many local jobs per $1 million in sales as large wholesale growers. Because these farms buy most of their inputs locally and employ more people, every dollar you spend at a farmers’ market hangs around in your community longer instead of disappearing into a corporate balance sheet.

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This New York study measures what happens when schools shift part of their food budget to local farms. It finds that every dollar schools spend on local food generates additional economic activity in the state through farm sales, wages, and local business purchases. It also notes that these benefits are largest when local purchases replace food sourced from out-of-state suppliers—in other words, when you’re actually displacing big, distant vendors instead of just rearranging spending between locals.

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This paper builds a method for tracking how much money schools spend on local food and how that money flows back to nearby farmers and businesses. Case studies show that when schools commit to buying from local farms, it can become a stable, long-term market that supports farm income, encourages new hiring, and keeps public dollars moving through local communities instead of leaving the state through large national distributors.

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This paper mapped bees across several cities and found that community gardens and small urban farms were some of the richest pollinator hotspots. In other words, little food-growing patches in cities punch way above their weight in supporting bees and other insects that keep plants alive.

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This extension report reviews evidence that urban farms and gardens reduce stormwater runoff, cool neighborhoods, increase pollinator habitat, and recycle nutrients that would otherwise become waste. So those “small” city farms and community gardens aren’t just cute – they’re part of the city’s environmental protection system.

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This evidence review pulls together research on urban farms and gardens. On the environmental side, it highlights improved soil quality, more green space, better stormwater control, and more habitat for birds and insects. It frames local growing in cities as a practical tool for climate adaptation and biodiversity, not just a hobby.

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This study compared long, industrial supply chains with shorter, more local ones for several foods. It found that short chains often use less energy and create fewer greenhouse gases per unit of food, especially when farms avoid wasteful packaging and transport. The takeaway: when farmers are closer to eaters and the system is lean, “food miles” and resource use really do drop.

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EU-funded research comparing multiple real-world short chains (farm shops, CSAs, box schemes, local fish clubs) with conventional supermarket chains. Case studies show that well-run SFSCs can cut transport emissions, packaging waste, and food loss, while improving freshness and reconnecting consumers with producers.

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Researchers here looked at farmers selling through farmers’ markets, CSAs, and other short chains. They show that these systems can cut packaging, reduce waste, and encourage more diverse, eco-friendly farming practices. For a shopper, buying from short chains tends to mean less hidden pollution behind the scenes.

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Across multiple large cohorts, people who ate more whole grains had lower risk of heart disease, total cancer, and dying from any cause. Swapping refined grains for whole-grain bread, oats, brown rice, etc. was consistently linked with longer, healthier lives.

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Looking at long-term eating patterns, this paper found that fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and nuts together were linked to lower cardiovascular mortality. It’s basically a data-driven endorsement of a plate built around simple, whole ingredients.

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Reviewing dozens of studies, this umbrella review links high intakes of free sugars (from soft drinks, desserts, etc.) with higher risk of weight gain, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and dental problems. The big message: most people need to cut back on refined, added sugars and focus sweetness into small amounts of higher-quality sources like fruit and (in moderation) things like honey.

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Pooling 22 prospective studies, this meta-analysis showed that people in the highest ultra-processed food group had 17% higher risk of cardiovascular disease and 23% higher risk of coronary heart disease than those who ate the least. Sugary drinks and processed meats were especially bad, while some less-junk versions (like simple breads or yogurts) were less harmful.

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This massive review of 45 cohort studies found that higher ultra-processed food intake is consistently linked with higher risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, overweight/obesity, some cancers, and even common mental health disorders. The pattern is the same across countries: more factory food, more chronic disease.

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In more than 100,000 French adults, higher intake of ultra-processed foods was associated with higher risks of overall cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, and cerebrovascular disease. The key takeaway: eating more factory-made, packaged meals and snacks shows up later as more heart problems.

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