the only difficult thing about living here is the cost of food. having spent the last 3 years in iowa, i've been spoiled by low prices on groceries. now that i'm in la, milk costs $4/gallon instead of $1.30, butter costs $5/pound instead of $1.50, bread costs at least $3/loaf instead of $0.79, medium eggs are $2/dozen instead of $0.53, and jumbo eggs are a whopping $5/dozen instead of $0.89. don't even ask about produce and meat. i haven't been out to eat yet, but i'm guessing it's worse.
what the hell? according to the usda's 2002 census of agriculture, california leads the other 49 states by a gigantic margin in the market value of agricultural products sold (which was the closest thing i could find to a composite agricultural value). the us's total market value of agricultural products sold is $200,646,355,000, and $25,737,173,000 of that is from california. the next closest competetitor is texas with $14,134,744,000. iowa comes in third with $12,273,634,000. if you combine texas and iowa, their agricultural worth is about $671,205,000 more than california's. california alone accounts for 12.83% of the country's total agricultural worth.
so how come agricultural products are so much more expensive here? i understand that urban markup occurs, but what doesn't make sense is that most mass-produced products that are shipped here from much farther away are marked up at a dramatically lower rate (eg, pop and snack foods cost almost exactly the same here as they do in iowa).
i'm left with the following conclusion: grocery stores and/or food distributors in la are profit-seeking assholes and are overpricing the hell out of staple foods just because they can. this is even more infuriating given that these products are the basics most poor people rely on most heavily. they're deliberately victimizing the poor in favor of the middle class. more luxurious items such as cookies, wine, and gourmet coffee are left at a more-or-less affordable price (which is, nevertheless, beyond the means of the very poor) while staples are marked up to the point that the poor can just barely afford them.
if i weren't poor myself, i'd feel really guilty about patronizing these stores. instead, i just feel ass-raped.