4.8 Article

Post-farmgate food value chains make up most of consumer food expenditures globally

Journal

NATURE FOOD
Volume 2, Issue 6, Pages 417-425

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s43016-021-00279-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [GZ: ME 5179/1-1]
  2. Cornell University [584000-8-0051]
  3. Economic Research Service of the US Department of Agriculture [584000-8-0051]

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Progress towards achieving United Nations Sustainable Development Goals relies heavily on interventions in food value chains, yet data limitations have hindered the production of cross-nationally comparable estimates of the magnitude of these chains. This study introduces a standardized method and data series to estimate the distribution of consumer food expenditures between value-added activities on farms and in the post-farmgate value chain, shedding light on the significance of the post-farmgate food value chain and its evolving shares in response to changing economic, demographic, and agricultural conditions in different regions.
Progress towards many United Nations Sustainable Development Goals depends on interventions in food value chains, yet data and methods have thus far limited the production of cross-nationally comparable estimates of food value chains' magnitudes. Here we develop a standardized method and data series to estimate the distribution of consumer food expenditures between value-added activities on farms and in the post-farmgate value chain. Using data from 61 countries over 2005-2015, representing 90% of the global economy, we show that farmers receive, on average, 27% of consumer expenditure on foods consumed at home and a far lower percentage of food consumed away from home. That figure consistently falls in the 16-38% range for middle- and high-income countries and falls significantly as incomes rise. The large and growing post-farmgate food value chain merits greater attention as the world grapples with the economic, environmental and social impacts of food systems. The distribution of consumer food expenditures across value-added activities on farms and in the post-farmgate value chain, although important, has been overlooked. Building on a global food dollar series, this study shows how the farm and post-farmgate shares of consumer food expenditures evolve in response to changing economic, demographic and agricultural conditions in different regions.

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