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Briefing Rooms

Food Consumption: Effects of Food Consumption Choices on Agriculture

Contents
 

Although the American diet is becoming more healthful, eating habits still fall short of Federal dietary advice provided in the Food Guide Pyramid. If Americans followed the Food Guide Pyramid recommendations, the resulting changes in consumer demand would lead to changes in the type and quantity of food produced and how and where it is produced (see the reports A Dietary Assessment of the U.S. Food Supply and Moving Toward the Food Guide Pyramid: Implications for U.S. Agriculture).

Closing the gap between average U.S. diets and Pyramid serving recommendations means consumers will have to change their eating habits significantly. For example, while consumption of fruits and vegetables reached record highs in 1997, consumption of dark-green leafy vegetables remained well below Federal dietary benchmarks. At the same time, consumption of added sugars hit an all-time high, at more than two and a half times the Pyramid upper limit.

Bringing diets in line with Pyramid recommendations would mean adjustments in U.S. agricultural production, trade, nonfood uses, and prices. If the average American were to fully adopt the Pyramid recommendations, U.S. crop acreage devoted to food and feed would need to increase by nearly 6 million acres over the average levels of the early 1990's. This adjustment is relatively small in relation to total planted area, about 2 percent of average 1991-95 agricultural cropland, and well below the almost 22 million acres of cropland idled under Federal annual acreage planting constraints during 1991-95. However, this modest adjustment masks larger changes in production and prices expected for individual commodity sectors, notably caloric sweeteners, fats and oils, fruits, and certain vegetables (dark-green leafy and deep-yellow vegetables, dry beans, peas, and lentils), where the gap between recommended and actual consumption is large.

Interactions among different agricultural commodity markets may moderate the size of the estimated adjustments. Consumers would substitute some products for others, depending on prices. Farmers base planting decisions on expected prices and can alternate among crops, with some limitations, on the same piece of land. Producers and processors alter the supply of final foods, depending on relative prices and changing technologies, for products produced jointly from the same raw agricultural commodity. For example, higher demand for low-fat dairy products can be met by producing less ice cream, butter, and cheese and producing more low-fat yogurt and skim milk. Because of the size and complexity of the U.S. food system, an almost infinite combination of foods, production methods, end uses, and trade adjustments could work together to move diets toward the Food Guide Pyramid recommendations. Food consumption is just one of several components of demand for agricultural products, along with animal feed, exports, and nonfood or industrial uses. Shifts in food demand due to dietary change would likely result in offsetting shifts in production, trade, and nonfood uses, which would tend to moderate the effects on food prices and farm income in the long run.

Caloric Sweeteners

A 60-percent reduction in average consumption of caloric sweeteners would be needed to reach Pyramid recommendations, a figure that contrasts sharply with the 9-percent per person increase of 1991-95. Such an unprecedented reduction would translate into a drop in domestic sugar output of 4.8 million tons and in planted area of 0.7 million acres of sugarcane and 1.1 million acres of sugar beets. Sugar imports would have to be cut by 1.3 million tons from the 2.1 million annual average of 1991-95. Production is highly concentrated in Florida and Louisiana for sugarcane and in the Red River Valley of North Dakota and Minnesota and in parts of Idaho, Michigan, and California for sugar beets. Producers in these regions would likely shift production to fruits and vegetables or field crops.

Fats and Oils

U.S. consumption of added fats and oils, at 59 grams a day, is among the highest in the world. Total fat intake would have to be cut 36 percent to meet the suggested daily limit, which contrasts sharply with the 0.5-percent increase between 1991 and 1995. These reductions would affect the soybean sector the most because soybeans dominate the market for added fats and oils. To match the reduced demand, soyoil production would need to decline by 2 million tons, which would translate into 20 percent less acreage devoted to soybeans, or a 12-million-acre decline. However, market forces would limit the reduction to less than 3 million acres, as exports, feed, and industrial uses would offset the decline in domestic oil demand.

Fruits

Fruit consumption would more than double if the average U.S. diet were to meet Food Guide Pyramid recommendations. Consumption of citrus, melons, and berries would need to rise by 150 percent, and consumption of other fruits would need to rise 114 percent. Meeting the need with domestic production alone would imply a 3- to 4-million-acre increase in planted area. However, imports would likely help take up the slack, as land, labor, and climatic constraints limit expansion of domestic fruit production.

Vegetables

Meeting Food Guide Pyramid recommendations would require some change in the quantities and types of vegetables consumed. Although consumption of vegetables as a group would have to rise only 10 percent, average diets would have to include more than four times as many dark-green leafy and deep-yellow vegetables; three times as many dry beans, peas, and lentils; and fewer servings of starchy vegetables (mostly potatoes). A net increase of 2 to 3 million acres of vegetables would be needed to produce enough vegetables to meet the increased demand, with 1.4 million acres devoted to additional dark-green leafy and deep-yellow vegetables. Some of the increase in domestic supplies could be reached by switching the types or mix of crops planted.

Milk and Meat Products

Consumption of dairy products needs to grow by 22 percent and that of meats by 5 percent for average diets to meet Food Guide Pyramid recommendations. More importantly, meeting the recommendations would require adjustments in the mix of products in these food groups, notably a reduction in fat. Increased demand for low-fat products would raise retail prices for those products, while decreased demand for higher fat products would result in these products moving to industrial uses and exports. Such a shift would have a measurable effect on the grain sector.

Grains

Average consumption of grain foods as a group are close to Food Guide Pyramid recommendations, so adjustments in the food grain sector are likely to be relatively small compared with adjustments for feed grain producers. Changes in feed grain demand will be closely linked to changes in the corn sweetener, oilseed, meat, and poultry industries. A net increase of 3.5 million acres of feed grains would likely be needed to respond to these adjustments with a 3.5-million-acre decline in corn used for corn sweeteners offset by a 7.0-million-acre increase in shifts in feed grain production for the livestock and dairy sectors.

A change in the mix of grain foods consumed to include more whole-grain and fewer refined-grain foods is likely to increase the share of food grains, like wheat and rice, consumed in their whole-grain form while decreasing production of refined products like white rice and white flour. Such changes would occur largely at the milling, rather than production, level. However, because more whole-grain product can be extracted per pound of grain (1 pound of wheat, for example, yields 0.98 pound of whole-wheat flour compared with 0.74 pound of white flour) increased consumption of whole-grain foods could lower food grain demand. With over 30 million acres of cropland used to produce food grains nationwide, even a decline of 1 to 2 percent in food grain demand could reduce total grain area by 0.3 to 0.6 million acres.

 

For more information, contact: Jean Buzby

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: August 26, 2004