4.6 Article

Cost and affordability of nutritious diets at retail prices: Evidence from 177 countries

Journal

FOOD POLICY
Volume 99, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodpol.2020.101983

Keywords

Food prices; Diet costs; Nutrient adequacy; adequacy Cost of subsistence; Poverty

Funding

  1. project led at IFPRI on Advancing Research in Nutrition and Agriculture (ARENA) - Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1177007]
  2. UKAid [OPP1182628]
  3. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1182628]
  4. Rutgers University under USDA [TA-CA-15-008]
  5. Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Nutrition under USAID [AID-OAA-L10-00006]
  6. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1182628, OPP1177007] Funding Source: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

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This study examines the relationship between the daily cost of essential nutrients and dietary energy in 177 countries worldwide, finding that nutrient adequate diets are more expensive than energy-sufficient ones, with rural travel times and electrification being significant factors influencing diet costs. The data suggests opportunities for targeted policies and programs to improve nutrition status among low-income populations by reducing market prices, increasing nutrition assistance, and enhancing household incomes.
Many policies and programs aim to bring nutritious diets within reach of the poor. This paper uses retail prices and nutrient composition for 671 foods and beverages to compute the daily cost of essential nutrients required for an active and healthy life in 177 countries around the world. We compare this minimum cost of nutrient adequacy with the subsistence cost of dietary energy and per-capita spending on all goods and services, to identify stylized facts about how diet cost and affordability relate to economic development and nutrition out-comes. On average, the most affordable nutrient adequate diet exceeds the cost of adequate energy by a factor of 2.66, costing US$1.35 per day to meet median requirements of healthy adult women in 2011. Affordability is lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa. The sensitivity of diet costs to each requirement reveals the high cost of staying within acceptable macronutrient ranges, particularly the upper limit for carbohydrates. Among micronutrients, total diet costs are most sensitive to requirements for calcium as well as vitamins A, C, E, B12, folate and riboflavin. On average, about 5% of dietary energy in the least-cost nutrient adequate diets is derived from animal source foods, with small quantities of meat and fish. Over 70% of all animal products in least-cost diets is eggs and dairy, but only in upper-middle and high-income countries. In lower income countries where egg and dairy prices are significantly higher, they are replaced by larger volumes of vegetal foods. When controlling for national income, diet costs are most significantly correlated with rural travel times and rural electrification. These data suggest opportunities for targeted policies and programs that reduce market prices and the cost of nutritious diets, while improving affordability through nutrition assistance, safety nets and higher earnings among low-income households.

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