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Food cost and nutritional quality

In reaction to the paper by Katz and colleagues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2012

Nicole Darmon*
Affiliation:
INRA, UMR1260F-13385 Marseille, France INSERM, UMR1062‘Nutrition Obesity and Risk of Thrombosis’F-13385 Marseille, France Faculté de Médecine, Aix-Marseille UniversitéF-13385 Marseille, France
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Abstract

Type
Letters to the editor
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2012

Madam

In a paper published in Public Health Nutrition entitled ‘A cost comparison of more and less nutritious food choices in US supermarkets’, Katz et al. compared the cost of foods from a given food category according to their nutritional quality(Reference Katz, Doughty and Njike1). Foods were classified as ‘more nutritious’ (n 68) or ‘less nutritious’ (n 63) using subjective and objective criteria based on information on the packaging. The authors found that the average price for more nutritious foods did not differ significantly from that of less nutritious foods.

We fully agree with their assertion that ‘improving dietary choices does not invariably cost more’. The possibility of modelling low-cost nutritious diets has been known for a while(Reference Stigler2) and is routinely used by the US Department of Agriculture to design the Thrifty Food Plan(Reference Carlson, Lino and Fungwe3). We also agree with Katz et al.'s proposal that ‘objective measures of overall nutritional quality might be used for direct comparison of nutrition per dollar’. In fact, we demonstrated the validity of such a measure, based on French data(Reference Maillot, Ferguson and Drewnowski4).

However, we disagree with their statement that before their study ‘no other study has investigated the price differences of foods within food categories’. A previous study in the UK analysed and compared the contents of energy, fat, minerals and vitamins in branded and ‘economy line’ simple foods (canned tomatoes, orange juice, sliced bread, fresh potatoes and sausages) and found that prices of foods with similar nutrient contents could differ fourfold(Reference Cooper and Nelson5). Another study conducted in France analysed the relationship between the nutritional quality and price of 220 food products in seventeen different categories(Reference Darmon, Caillavet and Joly6). Within a given category, branded products cost 2·5 times more than the low-cost products with an equivalent energy and lipid content; they also had a slightly higher (1·3) ingredient quality score, suggesting that the lower price could be due in part to the replacement of higher-quality, higher-cost ingredients (meat, fish, fruit, vegetables) with poorer-quality, cheaper ingredients such as sugars, fats (including hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable fats), refined starch, salt, polyphosphates, certain food additives, colorants and texturizing agents. Other studies have analysed the difference in price between regular food items and their better-nutritional-quality equivalents (low-fat and/or low-salt and/or more fibre) in Canada(Reference Ricciuto, Ip and Tarasuk7) and Australia(Reference Giskes, Van Lenthe and Brug8) and found that the healthy options were significantly more expensive than the regular ones. Yet more recent studies conducted by the French Observatory for Diet Quality (http://www.oqali.fr/oqali/), particularly on dairy products(Reference Menard, Dumas and Gillot9), show that cheaper products are not always the more energy-dense, saltier or sweeter options.

Too few studies have rigorously examined whether the nutritional quality of foods is associated with their prices within the same category. In addition, these studies have used different methods to estimate the nutritional quality of food and different definitions of what is a food category, perhaps explaining why conflicting results were obtained. As poor people's food choices are highly influenced by food prices, whether or not there is a difference between the nutritional quality food products according to their price is an important issue in the fight against health inequalities.

References

1.Katz, DL, Doughty, K, Njike, Vet al. (2011) A cost comparison of more and less nutritious food choices in US supermarkets. Public Health Nutr 14, 16931699.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2.Stigler, GJ (1945) The cost of subsistence. J Farm Econ 27, 303314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3.Carlson, A, Lino, M & Fungwe, T (2007) The Low-Cost, Moderate-Cost, and Liberal Food Plans, 2007. Report no. CNPP-20. Alexandria, VA: US Department of Agriculture, Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion; available at http://www.cnpp.usda.gov/Publications/FoodPlans/MiscPubs/FoodPlans2007AdminReport.pdfGoogle Scholar
4.Maillot, M, Ferguson, EL, Drewnowski, Aet al. (2008) Nutrient profiling can help identify foods of good nutritional quality for their price: a validation study with linear programming. J Nutr 138, 11071113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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8.Giskes, K, Van Lenthe, FJ, Brug, Jet al. (2007) Socioeconomic inequalities in food purchasing: the contribution of respondent-perceived and actual (objectively measured) price and availability of foods. Prev Med 45, 4148.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9.Menard, C, Dumas, C, Gillot, Net al. (2012) The French OQALI survey on dairy products: comparison of nutrient contents and other nutrition information on labels among types of brands. J Hum Nutr Diet 25, 323333.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed