Although some have called COVID-19 “the great equalizer,” recent data from the CDC shows that Black, Latinx and Native American people become infected and die more often than whitesFootnote 1. In a recent press briefing NIAID Director Dr. Anthony Fauci described these disparities in terms of the prevalence of “underlying medical conditions—the diabetes, the hypertension, the obesity” (quoted in Lahut 2020).

While few would contend that diet is the only or even the main cause of these disparities, some medical experts, including Dr. Fauci, argue that Americans’ diet-related health conditions make us uniquely and unequally vulnerable. We can interrogate this claim using a food justice perspective, which examines how racial capitalism affects the production, distribution and consumption of food.

Popular culture and nutrition science tend to conceptualize diet as the result of individual choices. In contrast, food justice researchers emphasize the structural conditions that affect food consumption. A food justice framework argues that food is more than just calories and grocery stores. Residential segregation and gentrification, racism in public health and medical institutions and labor conditions throughout the food sector contribute to racial and economic food-related health disparities.

As food justice researchers, we argue that dietary decisions are often constrained by spatial and economic disparities in access to healthy food. These disparities are rooted in racist urban development policies like redlining and urban renewal, which have long left communities of color without the means to invest in their built environments while targeting them for demolition through eminent domain. Efforts to “green” these neighborhoods by bringing in health stores and urban farms can increase property values and displace low-income people and people of color to areas with even more limited food access.

Moreover, the growing gap in the diets of rich and poor people goes beyond physical access to supermarkets. Foods that are often touted as healthy are expensive, and many low-income families simply are forced to do without them. Food justice research also documents racism in food stores and in consulting with nutrition and health professionals. Additionally, the cultural whiteness of public health campaigns and alternative food movements can inadvertently exclude these communities.

Beyond diet disparities, labor conditions throughout the food industry predispose people of color to a variety of health risks. Black and Latinx workers are over-represented in the lowest-wage sectors of the food industry. Many of these workers are deemed “essential” and continue to risk their lives to keep the food system functioning. Major supermarket chains have reported employee deaths, and the soaring rates of infection in meatpacking plants reveals a rampant, industry-wide disregard for the safety of their workforces. People of color are also likely over-represented among Amazon warehouse and food delivery workers, who have had to strike for paid sick leave, sanitization procedures, and basic protections like hand sanitizer. As middle-class consumers’ reliance on these services increases, those who perform this “essential” work remain unprotected physically, socially, and financially, contributing to elevated infection and mortality rates.

In the press conference described at the beginning of this commentary, Dr. Fauci remarked that the current crisis shines a bright light on how unacceptable these health disparities are. As food justice scholars have long shown, food insecurity and workplace exploitation are disproportionately experienced by low-income people and people of color not because of poor choices, but because of structural racism and economic inequalities (Laster Pirtle 2020). Now, in the time of this pandemic, we are seeing that we do not have a strong social safety net to assist the large number of food-insecure households, nor do we have work protections to ensure that our lowest paid workers can make it through this crisis safely.

Unfortunately, it is Black, Latinx, and Indigenous communities that these failures hit the hardest as they unequally bear the burden of risk and illness. While stark racial health disparities predate COVID-19, if we continue to turn a blind eye to the classism and racism embedded within our food system, these disparities will inevitably widen as this pandemic weaves its way through the population.