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New Report: Price vs Quality: The Hidden Costs of Low-Priced Food

By Julie Chapon, Gabriela Mourad Vicenssuto (Yuka) & Emily Broad Leib (FLPC)

In a new report, “Price vs Quality: The Hidden Costs of Low Priced Food,” The Food Law and Policy Clinic and Yuka reveal a striking reality about how price shapes food composition in the United States, to the detriment of consumers. Drawing on an analysis of more than 800 food products sold nationwide across 12 of the most common processed food categories, including cereals, bread, and other everyday staples, the study examines how additives, sugar, and sodium vary across price ranges.

The findings are clear: lower-priced products contain significantly more additives, sugar, and salt, exposing a two-tier food system where access to healthier products is largely reserved for those who can afford them. This report combines robust data with policy recommendations to show how food policies shape what ends up on Americans’ plates and what must change to make healthy food the standard, not a privilege.

Read the report.

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