Local Review
Why? Flavor. A tomato grown locally is allowed to ripen on the vine. A tomato grown industrially is picked green, gassed with ethylene to turn it red, and shipped 1,500 miles. The flavor is incomparable.
The "Local" Advantage in Food The most visible battlefront for the local movement is food. The "Locavore" movement—people who eat food grown or produced within a 100- to 150-mile radius—has exploded.
When you spend $100 at a big-box chain store, a significant portion of that money immediately leaves the community. It goes to a headquarters in another state, to shareholders on Wall Street, and to manufacturing plants overseas. Studies suggest that only $13 to $43 of that $100 stays in the local economy. A tomato grown industrially is picked green, gassed
Let’s unpack the layers of this powerful concept. Before we dive deep, we need an honest definition. "Local" is relative. To a farmer, local might mean a 100-mile radius. To a city-dweller, local might mean "within my borough." To a software engineer, local might mean "stored on my hard drive rather than the cloud."
Furthermore, the rise of remote work supercharges local economies. When a software engineer moves from San Francisco to Boise, they bring a San Francisco salary into a Boise local economy. This is a massive transfer of wealth that, if channeled correctly, can revitalize Main Streets across the country. They say you are what you eat. But more accurately, you are where you spend. The "Locavore" movement—people who eat food grown or
Identify three things you usually buy on Amazon (lightbulbs, batteries, plant pots). Find a local hardware store or general store that sells them. Go in and ask the owner for help.
We are seeing a hybrid model emerge: "Glocal." Think global, act local. You might use a global platform (like Shopify) to run a local boutique. You might use a global app (like Uber Eats) to order from a local pho shop. The technology is global, but the value creation remains local. Buy eggs from a neighbor
Commit to one "local-only" meal per day. Buy eggs from a neighbor, bread from a local bakery, and produce from a farmer’s market. Notice the difference in taste.