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Briefing Rooms

Food Consumption: Individual Food Consumption

Contents
 

The Dietary Guidelines for Americans are designed to help Americans choose diets that will promote good health and reduce risk for chronic diseases, such as heart disease, certain types of cancer, diabetes, stroke, and osteoporosis. Different foods contain different nutrients and other healthful substances. No single food can supply all the nutrients in the amounts a person needs. To get all the nutrients and other substances we need, the Dietary Guidelines recommend "let the Pyramid guide your food choices." As a starting point, consumers should choose the number of daily servings from each of the five major food groups according to the recommendations from the Food Guide Pyramid. Data from the Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals (CSFII) 1994-96 can be used to assess how closely consumers are following the Food Guide Pyramid. Two sets of tables from ERS report food and nutrient intake and compare American's diets to recommendations of the Food Guide Pyramid and the 2000 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

Food consumption tables provide estimates of food consumption in relation to recommendations from the Food Guide Pyramid.

Nutrient intake tables provide estimates of nutrient intake in relation to recommendations from the 2000 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.

For each set of tables, we first report average consumption/intake and the proportion of consumers meeting the recommendation. Then we look at consumption/intake by location, from which we can link dietary deficiencies to locations where foods are prepared. In both sets of tables, we report data for Americans ages 2 and older, children ages 2-18, and seniors ages 60 and older.

Individual Survey Data

Since the 1930's, USDA has conducted seven food consumption surveys on a National scale: 1936, 1942, 1948 (urban only), 1955, 1965-66, 1977-78, and 1987-88. The data have been used to describe food consumption patterns and to assess the nutritional contents of diets. Research based on the surveys has influenced policies related to food production and marketing, food safety, food assistance, and nutrition education. The 1977-78 and 1987-88 surveys included two components: (1) household food use during a 7-day period and (2) individual food intakes for 3 days. While the household food use component has not been conducted since 1987-88, the individual food intake component, the CSFII, was conducted during 1989-91, 1994-96, and 1998.

The CSFII measures foods actually eaten by individuals. The survey records food intake over specific periods of time (2 nonconsecutive days during 1994-96 using 24-hour dietary recalls). In addition to food-intake data, the survey collects demographic information, such as household size, income, race, age, and sex, and information on where a food was purchased, how it was prepared, and where it was eaten. The CSFII provides information for use in policy formation, regulation, program planning and evaluation, education, and research. For example, data from recent surveys have been used to evaluate the effect of food fortification on nutrient intakes, estimate exposure to pesticide residues and other contaminants from foods, and target nutrition assistance and education programs to those who need them most. The data are particularly valuable for measuring the effect of socioeconomic and demographic characteristics on food consumption. Get more information about the CSFII.

Nutrient Intakes of Low-Income Households

To evaluate the effects of food assistance programs, such as the Food Stamp Program, one needs to determine what the percentage change in the quantity of food demanded by a consumer would be with a change in the price of the food, the price of competing or complementary foods, or the consumer's income. This is known as the "elasticity of demand," and researcher's need separate demand elasticity estimates for households of different income levels. Most available demand elasticities are estimated from time-series data based on average consumer behavior and may not well represent the low-income households of concern. ERS used data from the 1987-88 Nationwide Food Consumption Survey to estimate demand elasticities for households segmented by income levels. For more information on this study, go to the report, Estimation of Food Demand and Nutrient Elasticities from Household Survey Data.

In this study, ERS developed an approach for estimating a demand system from household survey data. The study used the unit values of foods available in household surveys as variables to model a food demand system. Because the unit values of foods reflect market prices and consumer choices of food quality, we adjusted the estimates by excluding the food quality effects and obtained a complete set of demand information, including own-price, cross-price, and expenditure elasticities. This approach is particularly useful in estimating a demand system when obtaining time series data is difficult or when the estimates of demand elasticities across different population groups are required for food policy decisionmakers.

ERS classified all households into three income groups and then estimated the demand structures for both the entire sample of households and each group of households. Most estimated demand elasticities were statistically significant and consistent with economic theory in sign and magnitude. This study's estimates of food quality effects show that food quality plays a significant role in household budget allocation and that food quality is an important factor in modeling a food demand system from household survey data. Results show that the estimated demand elasticities were different across income groups. For example, the price elasticity of beef for the low-income group was -0.29 compared with -0.41 for the high-income group. The price elasticity of demand for fruits was -0.65 for the low-income group and -0.75 for the high-income group. This finding suggests that food policy analysis should use the demand elasticity of a specific income group (for example, the low-income group) when that group is the household of interest.

We also used the estimated demand elasticities for low-income households to measure nutrient income elasticities—the percentage change in nutrient availability with respect to changes in household food expenditure. The results indicate that consumption of all 13 food groups increases as food expenditures increase. Consequently, the nutrient elasticities with respect to food expenditure and with respect to food stamp benefits were positive for the 25 nutrients studied.

 

For more information, contact: Biing-Hwan Lin

Web administration: webadmin@ers.usda.gov

Updated date: August 23, 2004