| Literature DB >> 23801712 |
Alan D Dangour1, Sophie Hawkesworth, Bhavani Shankar, Louise Watson, C S Srinivasan, Emily H Morgan, Lawrence Haddad, Jeff Waage.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To systematically review the available evidence on whether national or international agricultural policies that directly affect the price of food influence the prevalence rates of undernutrition or nutrition-related chronic disease in children and adults.Entities:
Keywords: Nutrition & Dietetics; Public Health
Year: 2013 PMID: 23801712 PMCID: PMC3696869 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-002937
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Commonly used output market policy interventions that directly affect the price of foods
| Policy type | Policy description |
|---|---|
| Output price policy | Policies aimed at influencing output prices, the prices which producers are paid for agricultural commodities, have been ubiquitous in both low-income and high-income countries. The range of domestic policy instruments used to influence output prices include taxes imposed at different points in the marketing chain and direct interventions in commodity markets (minimum support prices, state procurement, buffer stock operations etc) |
| Trade liberalisation | Agricultural trade policy involves an array of instruments including taxes, subsidies, quantitative restrictions on imports or exports and exchange rate policies. Trade policies affect food commodity prices through their impact on the prices and quantities of food imports and exports and they are often deployed in conjunction with domestic price policy instruments in pursuit of development and food security objectives |
| Food subsidies and Public Distribution Systems (PDS) | Governments deploy an array of policy instruments to influence the prices that consumers pay for food including open-ended general subsidies, PDS with quantity rationing, food stamps, food-for-work programmes and incentives to stimulate changes in food consumption of specific population groups |
Figure 1A conceptual framework linking food-price-related agricultural policies to food nutritional status and health*. *Pathways in red are the chains of influence that were systematically evaluated in this review.
Figure 2Flow diagram of publications for inclusion in systematic review.
Results of the systematic review: the effect of agricultural price policies on nutritional status and health
| Author (year) | Country | Policy | Commodities | Data sources | Methods | Outcome | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panel A: undernutrition outcome | |||||||
| Tarozzi | India (Andhra Pradesh) | Indian food subsidy programme | Rice, wheat, edible oils, sugar and cooking oil | National Family Health Survey to provide data on child anthropometry in affected area | Ex post analysis of the effect of a higher price regime for rice covered by the subsidy programme. Multiple regression used to assess differences in child undernutrition in relation to time in high price regime | Weight-for-age | No evidence for an association between length of time spent in the higher price regime and child nutritional status as assessed by weight-for-age |
| Panel B: overnutrition and nutrition-related chronic disease outcomes | |||||||
| Veerman | The Netherlands | European Union withdrawal support policy | Fruit and vegetables | Estimate of fruit and vegetable (tonnes) withdrawn | Ex ante models of the effect of a change in dietary intake of fruit and vegetables on disease risks (potential impact fractions) and integrate the changes in disease-specific data into national life tables | Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) and life expectancy | Removal of fruit and vegetable withdrawal policy would slightly increase fruit and vegetable consumption, reduce the incidence of cardiovascular disease and cancer, reduce the DALYs lost per year and modestly increase life expectancy |
| Asfaw | Egypt | Egyptian food subsidy programme | Bread, wheat flour, sugar and cooking oil | Integrated Household Survey to provide estimate of household food expenditure (and hence food consumption) and body mass index of mothers | Ex post multiple regression and econometric estimation of effect of food subsidy policy | Body mass index of mothers | Increases in the price of bread and sugar were associated with significant reduction in body mass index of mothers |
| Okrent and Alston | USA | Farm subsidies on grain commodities | Eight food groups consumed at home, a composite variable for food consumed away from home, and alcoholic beverages | National data on use of farm commodities and retail products | Ex ante equilibrium displacement models of the effect of removal of farm subsidy policy | Adult weight | Removal of existing farm subsidies on grain commodities would result in a modest reduction in weight |