FoodReview: The 1990’s: A Dynamic Decade for the U.S. Food System
Rosanna Morrison, Economics editor
FoodReview No. (FR-23-3)
March 2001
About this magazine
Consumers in the 1990’s demanded quick, easy-to-prepare grocery foods to match their fast-paced lifestyles. And, the rising incomes of the second half of the decade allowed consumers to pay for these convenience foods and for more away-fromhome eating. The proportion of the food dollar spent eating out grew from 44 percent in 1990 to 47.5 percent in 1999. This demand for convenience translated into higher labor, packaging, energy, and other food marketing costs. Between 1990 and
1999, marketing costs rose 45 percent and accounted for most of the 37-percent rise in domestic consumer food spending.
In this report ...
Articles are in Adobe Acrobat PDF format.
- Frontmatter (Upfront, Contents), 58 kb
- Per Capita Food Supply Trends: Progress Toward Dietary Guidelines, 94 kb
- Spotlight on National Food Spending, 36 kb
- Food Spending by U.S. Households Grew Steadily in the 1990's, 91 kb
- Foodservice Sales Reflect the Prosperous, Time-Pressed 1990's, 109 kb
- Food Marketing Costs: A 1990's Retrospective, 177 kb
- Food Assistance Expanded, Then Contracted in the 1990's, 76 kb
- Nutrition Policy in the 1990's, 88 kb
- Food Safety Efforts Accelerate in the 1990's, 133 kb
- Recent Reports, 115 kb
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Updated date: March 2001
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