The convergence of food diets: Characterizing consumption patterns, food diversity, and the relationship to trade

dc.creatorBaquedano, F.
dc.date2023-04-27T13:25:12Z
dc.date2023-04-27T13:25:12Z
dc.date2020
dc.date2020-10-01T12:20:27.0000000Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-28T00:59:27Z
dc.descriptionSince the 1990s, technological advancements, growing incomes, increased trade, and urbanization have significantly impacted consumption patterns. Worldwide, there is growing evidence of some convergence of diets being facilitated by rapid changes in global food systems including the increasing market share held by supermarkets at all income levels. The formation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the emergence and rapid spread of the Internet have also played important roles in facilitating trade and increasing the variety of food available to consumers. Empirical evidence to examine these impacts has mostly been gathered at the household level and, at the global level, the focus has been on the effect of globalization on obesity and health. Using data from the periods 1994–1996 (WTO formation and emergence of the Internet) and 2015–2017 (rapid spread of the Internet), this paper analyses whether global diets are, in fact, converging. In the comparison of these two periods, the author finds that, as trade intensity increases for cereals, sugars, vegetable oils, and meat – which account for more than two-thirds of calories consumed – so does diversity of products consumed from within each group. The relationship between greater trade intensity and caloric consumption diversity is strongest for cereals, meat, and sugars. The author suggests that further research should undertake a disaggregated trade analysis in order to understand whether the increased food diversity is coming from imports of more diverse foods or other factors.
dc.format48 p.
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.identifier978-92-5-133227-6
dc.identifierhttps://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/cb0775en
dc.identifierhttp://www.fao.org/3/cb0775en/cb0775en.pdf
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/324513
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherFAO ;
dc.rightsFAO
dc.rightsCC BY NC SA 3.0 IGO
dc.titleThe convergence of food diets: Characterizing consumption patterns, food diversity, and the relationship to trade
dc.titleBackground paper for The State of Agricultural Commodity Markets (SOCO) 2020
dc.typeBook (stand-alone)

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