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Public grocery store
Government-run store selling food and household supplies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Public grocery stores are grocery stores that are operated by a government for the benefit of the general public. Because these grocery stores are publicly owned and run for community benefit rather than solely for profit, the grocery stores have greater flexibility to lower prices for customers. While the term "public grocery store" is most commonly used to mean government-run grocery stores, cooperatives, non-profits, and public-private partnerships are also sometimes referred to as public grocery stores.[1] Government-owned grocery stores may be nationalized, tribally owned, municipality-owned, or owned by other sub-national jurisdictions. State-owned grocery stores have been common in current and historic communist and socialist states, but are also found in states with predominantly capitalist or mixed-market economies. Commissaries are grocery stores run by militaries or prisons to provide goods to enlistees and prisoners.[2][3]
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About
The sociologist Justin Sean Myers and the psychologist Christine C. Caruso have compared government-run grocery stores for the general public to state-owned alcohol stores and military commissaries.[4]
The existence of public grocery stores alongside privately owned grocery stores in the context of a mixed-market economy has been referred to by some advocates as a "public option" for grocery shopping.[5][6]
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Americas
Bolivia –Bolivia's Empresa de Apoyo a la Producción de Alimentos (Emapa, Food Production Support Company), which includes a supermarket chain, is state-owned.[7][8]
Cuba –Most grocery stores in Cuba have been state-owned for decades, due to the government monopoly on retail. Since 2021, some small- and medium-size privately owned grocery stores have been allowed to exist, but typically remain unaffordable for the majority of Cubans.[9]
Greenland –In some remote areas of Greenland, state-owned grocery stores provide food and other commodities imported from Denmark and other countries.[10] Pilersuisoq is KNI's grocery retail store chain.[11]

United States –Each branch of the United States Armed Forces owns and operates its own public grocery system known as a PX or exchange, which is open to members of the military, and provides goods and services. The exchange includes military grocery stores known as commissaries.[12]In alcoholic beverage control states, liquor stores are owned by the state government.[13] During the 21st century, several cities in the United States have operated or have plans to open city-owned grocery stores, including cities in Florida, Illinois, Kansas, and Wisconsin.[14] Many stores that have received subsidies have closed within a few years or failed to open.[15] Some federally recognized American Indian tribes operate their own grocery stores. The Citizen Potawatomi Nation and the Choctaw Nation own tribal grocery stores in Oklahoma.[16] The Citizen Potawatomi Nation's FireLake Foods in Shawnee, Oklahoma, is the largest tribal grocery store in the United States.[17] In the 21st century, some food infrastructure advocates have supported the establishment of grocery stores through public–private partnerships to address negative effects associated with food deserts.[4]
Florida –Baldwin Market in Baldwin, Florida was owned and operated by the city. The grocery store was purchased by the city in 2019 and operated until March 2024, when it closed.[18]
Illinois –Launched in 2012, the Illinois Fresh Food Fund supported the opening of six grocery stores in food deserts.[19] As of 2024, four of them had closed.[15] In 2023, Rise Community Market opened in Cairo, Illinois.[20] In 2024, ProPublica reported on the store's financial struggles, citing that in the first half of the year, it averaged less than half its required sales to break even.[15] In 2023, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson announced that Chicago would explore the possibility of a city-owned grocery store.[21] The following year, a feasibility study conducted for the city described the municipal grocery store model as "necessary, feasible and implementable."[22] In 2025, city officials announced that they did not apply for state funding for the municipal grocery store, and instead plan to open multiple city-run markets throughout the city.[23][24] In January 2024,[25] the Grocery Initiative Act came into effect.[26] It authorized the Illinois Grocery Initiative, which aims to address inadequate access to fresh foods, particularly in food deserts, through grants to establish new grocery stores in food deserts and grants to upgrade equipment in existing stores.[27] In 2025, the city of Venice, Illinois received a $2.4 million state grant from the initiative to build a grocery store. The city plans to own the building and lease it to private investors.[28]
Kansas –In Kansas, several grocery stores are community-supported, municipality-owned, or city-run. In rural Kansas, local governments and communities had stepped in to own and operate grocery stores as private owners have retired. St. Paul Supermarket in St. Paul, is a municipality-owned business.[29] In May 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the city of Erie bought the Stub's Market grocery store in order to prevent the store from closing. The store was renamed to Erie Market.[30] In September 2024, citing high costs of running the store, the city announced that Erie Market would be leased to River Grocery LLC, which would take over operations and management.[31]
New York –Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City in the 2025 election, has called for the creation of city-owned grocery stores in New York City.[32] Mamdani's proposal is to have a pilot program where 5 public grocery stores are opened, one in each borough.[13] To fund the city-owned grocery stores, Mamdani proposed to redirect funds from the Food Retail Expansion to Support Health (FRESH) program. He claimed that FRESH spends $140 million and that the city-owned grocery stores would take less than half of that. Newspaper columnist Timothy P. Carney noted that the program has only given around $30 million in tax breaks since inception and had an average yearly cost of $3.3 million.[33] Criticism of the proposal has also come from private business owners, including bodega owners. The organization United Bodegas of America and John Catsimatidis, a billionaire owner of a supermarket chain, have criticized public grocery stores as harmful to private businesses and their workers.[34]
Wisconsin –Madison, Wisconsin has plans to open its first city-owned grocery store in a food desert on Madison's South Side, operated by Maurer's Urban Market. Originally scheduled to open by the end of 2023,[35] the store is estimated to open in mid-2025.[36]
Venezuela –During the administration of Hugo Chávez, many supermarkets were nationalized in 2010.[37] These supermarkets were among his administration's more popular policies.[38] Poor and low-income shoppers were more likely to frequent government-owned supermarkets, while wealthier shoppers more often frequented privately owned supermarkets.[39] When oil prices collapsed during the administration of Chávez's successor Nicolás Maduro, state-owned supermarkets struggled to import food during the economic crisis.[38] The Bicentenario supermarket chain in Venezuela was formerly owned by the state.[40] Nationalized under the administration of Hugo Chávez, the chain was later reprivatized.[41]
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Asia
Iran –The discount supermarket and department store chain Shahrvand Chain Stores Inc. is owned by the city government of Tehran.[42]
Sri Lanka –Sri Lanka has a government-owned supermarket chain known as Lanka Sathosa.[43] As of 2015, it was Sri Lanka's only state-owned supermarket chain.[44]
Vietnam –Vietnam's socialist government maintains state-owned supermarkets.[45] As of 2023, Co.op Mart, a supermarket brand under the state-run cooperative Saigon Co.op, had the most locations among supermarket brands in the country.[46]
Europe




Belarus –According to a 2005 United Nations Commission on Human Rights report, state-owned supermarkets in Belarus engaged in censorship by refusing to sell independent newspapers.[47]
Bulgaria –Due to the state monopoly over large retail outlets in the socialist People's Republic of Bulgaria, only small food retail businesses were permitted, such as stalls or kiosks.[48] In 2025, the Bulgarian government announced that it would be opening a chain of state-owned supermarkets.[49]
Czechoslovakia –Due to the state monopoly on retail, all grocery stores were government-owned in socialist Czechoslovakia and consolidated together under a single grocery store network called Zdroj. Zdroj owned grocery stores, greengrocers, and butcher shops across Czechia and Slovakia. The basis of Zdroj was a grocery store chain privately owned by Julius Meinl, Jedlo Bratislava, and Lahôdky Lamplota that was nationalized in 1948. Following the collapse of socialism, Zdroj was broken up into several regional chains and privatized.[50][51] Aside from Zdroj, Czechoslovakia also had a network of consumer cooperatives called Jednota that sold food products.[50]
Hungary –A state monopoly over the retail industry was instituted in the socialist Hungarian People's Republic, beginning in the 1940s.[52] The state-owned Csemege grocery chain was established in 1952. In 1992, following the collapse of the socialist government, Csemege was privatized and sold to the Austrian retail company Julius Meinl. Csemege-Julius Meinl was later purchased by the Belgian Louis Delhaize Group and incorporated into the supermarket chain Match.[53][54] Julius Meinl also purchased the privatized Közért supermarket chain.[55] The state-owned Duna Fuszert Rt supermarket chain was privatized in 1989 when it was sold to the Belgian privately owned corporation Louis Delhaize Group. In 1991, the group purchased several more privatized small grocery stores and renamed them Profi.[56] In 1992, the CBA supermarket chain was formed by 10 businessmen who purchased 17 privatized grocery stores.[56] In 1995, private grocery retailer Tesco acquired the state-owned supermarket chain Global. At the time, Global had over 40 locations.[57][58]
Poland Due to the nationalization of retail in the socialist Polish People's Republic, many Polish grocery stores were state-owned. Społem, a consumers' co-operative of local grocery stores, also became controlled by the state during this time.[59] In 2020, the Polish government considered opening a government-owned grocery store chain to help farmers.[60]
Romania –State-owned grocery stores were once common in the Socialist Republic of Romania. The state monopoly on retail ended after the collapse of Communism in 1989.[61] In 2020, the Romanian government considered opening a state-owned retail chain called Unirea (The Union). The Romanian Ministry of Agriculture also announced the creation of a state-owned "agro food commerce" company to help Romanian small farmers and promote Romanian-made goods.[60]
Russia –In the Soviet Union, the government nationalized the retail industry after the Russian Revolution. Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, much of the retail sector was privatized.[62] The Eliseyevsky grocery store in Moscow was state-owned during the Soviet era. The store was privatized in the early 1990s.[63]
Yugoslavia –A state monopoly over retail was instituted in Yugoslavia in the 1940s, including government ownership of retail shops. By 1946, 90% of the retail industry had been nationalised.[64] The C-market supermarket chain was state-owned in Yugoslavia and Serbia and Montenegro.[65] The first Serbian supermarket was a C-market opened in Belgrade in 1958.[66]
Slovenia –Slovenia is a former Yugoslav republic. As such, its economy was largely state-owned prior to the dissolution of the federation. The state still owns many enterprises, such as the banks, which in turn own businesses such as supermarkets and newspapers.[67]
Spain –In 2023, in response to rising grocery store prices, the Spanish left-wing political party Podemos has proposed the creation of government-owned supermarkets with reduced prices.[60]
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Oceania
New Zealand –There are no state-owned grocery stores in New Zealand. State-owned supermarkets have been debated as a possible answer to New Zealand's "supermarket duopoly", but no proposal has been enacted.[68] The two privately owned supermarket chains, Foodstuffs and Woolworths New Zealand, together maintain a 90% market share in New Zealand.[69][70]
See also
- Alcoholic beverage control state
- Alcohol monopoly
- Commissary (store)
- Consumer goods in the Soviet Union
- Food bank
- GUM (department store)
- Hard currency shops in socialist countries
- Public department store
- Public education
- Public housing
- Public transport
- Public utility
- TsUMs in the Soviet Union - central universal department stores
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References
External links
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