Home ›› 22 Oct 2022 ›› World Biz
There is no such thing as a free lunch, economists chide, but one alternative store in the southern US city of Atlanta is offering the next best thing to those struggling with spiraling prices.
Locals load up on plantains, frozen meat and other ingredients free of charge at The Grocery Spot, a small, neon-lit outlet in the Georgia state capital.
In three weeks, Americans get to deliver their verdict on Joe Biden's presidency in the crucial midterm elections that decide whether his Democrats get to keep pushing through his agenda -- or cede control of Congress to the Republicans.
The economy, and inflation in particular, are topping every nationwide poll of voters' priorities, but householders have been struggling more than most in Atlanta -- where a generation of the "newly poor" has been crushed by soaring costs.
The Grocery Spot -- which launched almost two years ago, around the time that President Joe Biden assumed office and the consumer price index began its vertiginous ascent -- says it has seen an explosion in patrons.
"Have you been to the supermarket recently?" asks Theresa McGhee, an entrepreneur in the medical industry, as she negotiates the cramped shelves at the charitable association's premises in the northwestern Grove Park neighborhood.
"You pick up a few things, it's $100," the mother, in her 50s, complains as she fills up on potatoes, granola bars and tubs of ice cream.
With its 12 percent inflation rate, Atlanta is one of the US cities where prices have increased the most this year.
McGhee is clear that "greed, greed, greed" is at the root of the crisis -- from the avarice of elected politicians to the excesses of big business.
Price rises in the 97 percent-Black Grove Park neighborhood are fueling mistrust of the American political class, potentially imperiling Biden's Democrats in the November 8 election.
The party has relied heavily on the African-American vote in its bid to win the state, which was already hotly contested in 2020.
One manager of the store, who goes by the name Slugga, has already made up his mind that he won't be voting in three weeks, however.