Nutrient Intake: A Cross-National Analysis of Trends and Economic Correlates

34 Pages Posted: 25 Apr 2016 Last revised: 6 Feb 2023

See all articles by Dhaval Dave

Dhaval Dave

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) - NY Office; Bentley University - Department of Economics

Nadia K. Doytch

CUNY - The Graduate Center

Inas Kelly

Loyola Marymount University; National Bureau of Economic Research

Date Written: April 2016

Abstract

Nutrition is a key input in the health production function, and a better understanding of how we eat can aid in guiding effective policy change towards better population health. This study documents prevalence rates, trends in, and potential correlates of nutrient intake for panels of countries, categorized by geographical regions and levels of development. We assemble data from 209 countries, spanning 51 years (1961-2011), based on original data compilations using 960 country-years for BMI, 370 country-years for glucose, and 321 country-years for cholesterol. Our estimates inform the nature and scope of nutrient intake on a global scale, and contribute towards an understanding of the drivers of the general upward trend in food intake and obesity. The cross-national trends, across countries spanning the spectrum of economic development and geographic regions, suggest that simply analyzing aggregate caloric intake masks the heterogeneity in trends for the various food groups. Food groups analyzed include cereals, sugars and sweeteners, vegetable oils, meat, starch, milk, fruits, animal fats, alcoholic beverages, oil crops, pulses, vegetables, fish, and eggs. Fixed effects regression analyses reveal that caloric intake is strongly associated with hunger depth, body mass index, cholesterol levels, and glucose levels. Moreover, changes in real GDP per capita, labor force participation, and health care measures in a nation can partly explain the increase in caloric intake. We note that substantial heterogeneity remains. While these associations should not be interpreted as causal, they provide a first step towards understanding shifts in aggregate eating patterns across the globe and levels of economic activity.

Suggested Citation

Dave, Dhaval and Dave, Dhaval and Doytch, Nadia K. and Kelly, Inas, Nutrient Intake: A Cross-National Analysis of Trends and Economic Correlates (April 2016). NBER Working Paper No. w22179, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2769711

Dhaval Dave (Contact Author)

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) - NY Office

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Bentley University - Department of Economics ( email )

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United States

Nadia K. Doytch

CUNY - The Graduate Center ( email )

365 Fifth Avenue
New York,, NY 10016
United States

Inas Kelly

Loyola Marymount University ( email )

7900 Loyola Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90045
United States

National Bureau of Economic Research ( email )

1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States

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