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Nutrient adequacy for poor households in Africa would improve with higher income but not necessarily with lower food prices
EconomicsNature Food

Nutrient adequacy for poor households in Africa would improve with higher income but not necessarily with lower food prices

E. B. Mccullough, M. Lu, et al.

This groundbreaking study by Ellen B. McCullough, Meichen Lu, Yawotse Nouve, Joanne Arsenault, and Chen Zhen reveals how food prices and income shifts significantly impact nutrient intake among poor households in sub-Saharan Africa. Discover the striking differences in dietary responses between countries with varied staple consumption. Dive into the findings that challenge prior assumptions about nutritional adequacy!... show more
Abstract
Healthy diets are not affordable to all in Africa due to a combination of high food prices and low incomes. However, how African consumers might change demand patterns if prices or incomes were to change remains poorly understood. Using nationally representative household panel survey data from five sub-Saharan African countries, we model consumer preferences and examine how nutrient intake responds to changing food prices, total expenditures and other demand determinants. Here we find a stronger positive relationship between growth in poor consumers' total expenditures and their nutrient intake adequacy than has been previously documented. We also find that poor consumers' intake adequacy is especially sensitive to food staple prices in countries where one food staple dominates poor consumers' diets. In countries with multiple food staples, no single staple's price is a strong determinant of poor consumers' dietary intake adequacy.
Publisher
Nature Food
Published On
Feb 21, 2024
Authors
Ellen B. McCullough, Meichen Lu, Yawotse Nouve, Joanne Arsenault, Chen Zhen
Tags
nutrient intakefood pricesincome growthsub-Saharan Africahousehold datadietary adequacyconsumer preferences
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