1) The claim that 40 million Americans “deal with hunger” is, um, questionable. Their citation leads to feedingamerica.org, which cites USDA’s Household Food Security in the United States report (https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/94849/err-270.pdf?v=963.1). The methodology used is an 11-question survey (18 for households with children), where answering 3 questions in the affirmative marks you as low food security. The questions asked are (naturally) subjective. Even better, the first question is this: “We worried whether our food would run out before we got money to buy more.” Was that often, sometimes, or never true for you in the last 12 months? That’s an a real concern to have, but it is not what people are talking about when they say “dealing with hunger”. You can be running on a shoestring budget and often worry about whether you’ll have enough money for food without ever actually not having enough money for food.
2) A significant percentage of the population has non-trivial issues with executive function. Also, most of the population isn’t familiar with “best practices” (in terms of effective life strategies, basic finances, etc). Most people simply don’t think about things like this systematically, which is how you get the phenomenon of ~50% of the population not being able to cover a $400 emergency (or whatever those numbers are, they’re pretty close). This would be less of an issue if those cultural norms were inherited, but you can’t teach something you don’t know, and apparently we don’t teach Home Economics anymore (not that it’d be sufficient, but it would be better than nothing). This is a subject that deserves a much more in-depth treatment, but I think as a high-level claim this is both close enough to true and sufficient as a cause for what we might observe here. Making an infographic with a rotating course of 10 cheap, easy-to-prepare, relatively healthy, and relatively tasty meals is a great idea, but it’ll only be useful to the sorts of people who already know what “meal prep” means. You might catch some stragglers on the margin, but not a lot.
3) The upfront costs are less trivial than they appear if you don’t inherit any of the larger items, and remember, 50% of the population can’t cover a mid-3-figure emergency. “Basic kitchen equipment” can be had for under $100, but “basic kitchen equipment” doesn’t necessarily set you up to prepare food in a “meal prep” kind of way.
2) is something that I sort of thought about but not with as much nuance. I agree that such an infographic would be only useful for people who were looking for an alternate meal preparation strategy or something.
3) if it’s true that people want to do meal preppy type things but don’t have enough to pay upfront costs, there might be gains from 0-interest microloans, maybe via some MLM-type I loan you money, then once you’ve saved some money and paid me back, you loan other people money too.
There are a few things to keep in mind:
1) The claim that 40 million Americans “deal with hunger” is, um, questionable. Their citation leads to feedingamerica.org, which cites USDA’s Household Food Security in the United States report (https://www.ers.usda.gov/webdocs/publications/94849/err-270.pdf?v=963.1). The methodology used is an 11-question survey (18 for households with children), where answering 3 questions in the affirmative marks you as low food security. The questions asked are (naturally) subjective. Even better, the first question is this:
“We worried whether our food would run out before we got money to buy more.” Was that often, sometimes, or never true for you in the last 12 months?
That’s an a real concern to have, but it is not what people are talking about when they say “dealing with hunger”. You can be running on a shoestring budget and often worry about whether you’ll have enough money for food without ever actually not having enough money for food.2) A significant percentage of the population has non-trivial issues with executive function. Also, most of the population isn’t familiar with “best practices” (in terms of effective life strategies, basic finances, etc). Most people simply don’t think about things like this systematically, which is how you get the phenomenon of ~50% of the population not being able to cover a $400 emergency (or whatever those numbers are, they’re pretty close). This would be less of an issue if those cultural norms were inherited, but you can’t teach something you don’t know, and apparently we don’t teach Home Economics anymore (not that it’d be sufficient, but it would be better than nothing). This is a subject that deserves a much more in-depth treatment, but I think as a high-level claim this is both close enough to true and sufficient as a cause for what we might observe here. Making an infographic with a rotating course of 10 cheap, easy-to-prepare, relatively healthy, and relatively tasty meals is a great idea, but it’ll only be useful to the sorts of people who already know what “meal prep” means. You might catch some stragglers on the margin, but not a lot.
3) The upfront costs are less trivial than they appear if you don’t inherit any of the larger items, and remember, 50% of the population can’t cover a mid-3-figure emergency. “Basic kitchen equipment” can be had for under $100, but “basic kitchen equipment” doesn’t necessarily set you up to prepare food in a “meal prep” kind of way.
2) is something that I sort of thought about but not with as much nuance. I agree that such an infographic would be only useful for people who were looking for an alternate meal preparation strategy or something.
3) if it’s true that people want to do meal preppy type things but don’t have enough to pay upfront costs, there might be gains from 0-interest microloans, maybe via some MLM-type I loan you money, then once you’ve saved some money and paid me back, you loan other people money too.