Abstract

Universities continue to expand their local food sourcing, but the impacts of these sourcing changes are ambiguous. Some academics have measured these impacts using input-output analysis methods to track economic indicators that may be of interest to local communities. However, these studies do not capture nonmarket benefits of local food system investments or answer the broader question of whether local sourcing benefits society as a whole, both of which can be addressed using cost-benefit analysis. This paper explores cost-benefit analysis as an additional tool for measuring the economic impacts of local food investments, using a sourcing change by The Ohio State University as a case study. It builds on recent theoretical applied economics literature on the welfare impacts of local food sourcing and sheds light on important trade-offs of local sourcing that institutions and other buyers may want to consider. Employing data provided by Ohio State University Dining Services and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, I use a Monte Carlo simulation approach that accounts for uncertainty and allows for exploration of many scenarios. In more than half of the scenarios, local sourcing yields a net loss to society. However, additional research is needed by economists and others to enable local food system stakeholders to more easily and accurately conduct this work and add cost-benefit analysis to their project evaluation toolkit.

Highlights

  • While still a relatively small portion of total food sales, total local food sales appear to be increasing in the U.S In 2017, farmers earned US$11.8 billion in revenue from direct sales to consumers, retailers, institutions, and intermediaries with regional and local marketing (U.S Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Statistics Service [USDA NASS], 2019)

  • That is not the only activity related to local food systems taking place on campus—universities increasingly recognize the roles that they play as buyers and investing in local food systems directly

  • Cost-benefit analysis is a powerful and valuable tool, and importantly, the most appropriate tool for answering a crucial question frequently asked: will this project we’re pursuing benefit society? If the analysis finds that local sourcing yields a net benefit to society, it can be used by local food system advocates to better support their case for decision-makers to support local food investments

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Summary

Introduction

To explore how the process of cost-benefit analysis can be used by institutions and others, I consider Ohio State University (OSU) Dining Services’ decision to source a local product, sweet potatoes, for its dining halls in lieu of sourcing entirely from nonlocal producers. The research question addressed in this article is: What is the net benefit to society of OSU Dining Services changing from a nonlocal to a local supplier for sweet potatoes?

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