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Fruit and Vegetable Prices: Documentation

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How Much Do Fruits and Vegetables Cost?

USDA's Economic Research Service (ERS) has estimated average costs for 153 fresh and processed foods, using data from Nielsen's 2008 Homescan panel to estimate average retail prices per pound (or, for juices, per pint). Households participating in Nielsen's Homescan panel keep a record of their food purchases at retail stores including quantities bought, amount of money paid, and date of purchase. Purchases at supermarkets, supercenters, convenience stores, drugstores, and other types of retail facilities are all included. Nielsen also provides sample weights for estimating what all households paid across the contiguous United States. In order to estimate the cost to consume each food, ERS researchers further adjusted retail quantities to account for removing inedible parts and cooking that occur prior to consumption. Costs to consume foods were then estimated per edible cup equivalent as defined in the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Selecting Foods to Price

A wide variety of fruits and vegetables is available at retail stores across the Nation. ERS priced selected types of fruits and vegetables in various fresh and processed forms. For example, apples include fresh apples, dried apples, and applesauce. Apples are also priced in two juice forms—ready-to-drink and frozen concentrate that must be reconstituted at home.

Products identified for pricing are very specific products. The final selection of food products was determined in part by data constraints—ERS researchers could not price fresh produce sold on a "random weight" basis, such as whole, untrimmed heads of Romaine lettuce. Marketers usually do not prepackage untrimmed heads of Romaine lettuce, but sell the heads in loose form instead. Consumers can choose heads from a store display and place their selection in a plastic bag. Because the weight of the food item placed in the bag is not fixed, the term "random weight" describes this way of selling lettuce. Nielsen did not provide data on sales of individual random weight foods in 2008.

Even with certain data limitations, ERS was able to price many types of fruits and vegetables in at least one fresh form. For example, retailers sell Romaine hearts along with random-weight heads of Romaine lettuce. The hearts are generally sold in bags that include a manufacturer's or retailer's brand name along with a Universal Product Code (UPC, a type of bar code). Compared with an untrimmed head of Romaine lettuce, Romaine hearts require less washing/preparation and may also be more expensive.

Processed foods are priced by ERS in a similar manner as their fresh counterparts. Researchers identified processed foods that are as closely comparable in nutritional quality as possible to the same type of fruit or vegetable in fresh form. For that reason, ERS researchers excluded apple juice blended with other juices and banana chips made with oil. Some sweetened and flavored foods were included because excluding all sweetened or flavored foods would have overly restricted the selection. For example, ERS priced canned peaches packed in juice and in various types of syrup.

Estimating the Price of Buying Selected Foods at Retail

The next step in ERS's price analysis was to estimate the average cost of foods at retail stores on a per-pound (or per-pint for juices) basis. To do so, the 2008 Homescan data was used to estimate total expenditures by U.S. households on each food item and the total quantities bought. Next, average retail costs were calculated as the ratio of total expenditures to total quantities. From the Nielsen data, it was estimated that households living in the contiguous United States spent $247.1 million on frozen concentrated orange juice, which could make 480.7 million pints. Thus, the average retail cost of frozen concentrated juice was estimated at 51 cents per pint ($247.1 million/480.7 million pints).

To estimate total expenditures and quantities, ERS aggregated total purchases made by all households, in all seasons of the year, in all package sizes, and at all retail store formats. Nielsen's sample weights were applied to make the estimates representative of what all households across the contiguous United States paid in 2008.

Calculating aggregate quantities of foods purchased by households was more complicated than calculating aggregate household expenditures on each type of food. Fruits and vegetables are sold primarily by the pound or ounce. However, some items are priced on a "count basis," such as cantaloupes for $2.50 per melon. To convert these sales to a weight basis, ERS used the USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, Release 21 (SR). The SR estimates the weight of a medium cantaloupe at about 1,082 grams (roughly 2.4 pounds), including the weight of the rind and inedible cavity contents such as seeds.

Estimating the Costs to Consume Fruits and Vegetables

The final step in the analysis was to estimate the costs for consuming fruits and vegetables per edible cup equivalent as defined in the MyPyramid Equivalents Database, Version 2.0 (MPED). The MPED measures only the edible portion of a food item once it has been cooked or otherwise prepared for consumption. One pound of store-bought fresh pineapple yields 0.51 pounds of edible pineapple after the removal of the core, crown, and parings. For many fruits and vegetables, a 1-cup equivalent is equal to the weight of a full measuring cup of edible food. For example, a cup equivalent of cooked whole kernel corn weighs 164 grams whether from fresh, frozen, or canned product. On the other hand, it takes 2 edible cups of a raw, leafy vegetable, like spinach, to make a 1-cup equivalent, but only one-half cup of edible dried fruit to make the same.

Data on cooking yields, edible shares, and inedible shares (when available) of fruits and vegetables are from USDA's Standard Reference (SR) and Food Yields Summarized by Different Stages of Preparation (Handbook 102). If weight is lost in preparation, ERS defines a food's retail-equivalent weight as:

Retail-equivalent weight = weight of a cup equivalent/(1 - share lost)

where shares are expressed as fractions. For example, the SR reports that 10 percent of a fresh apple is inedible, while the MPED lists the weight of a 1-cup equivalent of raw apple with skin at 106 grams. To eat a 1-cup equivalent, households must therefore buy 106/0.9 = 117.78 grams of whole fresh apples. In contrast, if weight is gained in preparation, a food item's retail-equivalent weight is defined as:

Retail-equivalent weight = weight of a cup equivalent/(1 + share gained)

where shares are again expressed as fractions. USDA Handbook 102 reports that cooking dry beans increases their weight. The weight of the cooked product is approximately 240 percent of the weight of the dry beans prior to cooking. The MPED further lists the weight of a 1-cup equivalent of cooked pinto beans at 173 grams. Households must therefore buy 173/2.4 = 72.08 grams of dry pinto beans at a retail store to eat a 1-cup equivalent at home.

Because cup equivalent weights are in grams, it was necessary to convert earlier estimates of retail prices from a dollars-per-pound basis to a dollars-per-gram basis (by dividing by 453.59), and calculate the cost to eat a cup equivalent of a food item as:

Price per cup equivalent = (average retail price per gram) x (retail-equivalent weight in grams).

For more information, see How Much Do Fruits and Vegetables Cost?

For more information, contact: Hayden Stewart and Jeffrey Hyman

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: February 1, 2011