Of utmost concern to the Hunger Task Force is that disparities remain, particularly for households led by people of color, Black and African-Americans, Native Americans, and Latinx people. All these households experience hunger at disproportionately high rates, nearly twice the rate of the general population and two and a half times that of white households.
Racial discrimination directly affects jobs, housing, and policing and incarceration, which in turn affects quality of life, particularly in education, food supply, transportation, environmental conditions, mental health, healthcare, and even shortened life expectancy. Lived experience and multitudes of studies demonstrate a marked correlation between food insecurity and systemic racism.