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Consumption of processed food & food away from home in big cities, small towns, and rural areas of Tanzania

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dc.creator Sauer, Christine M
dc.creator Reardon, Thomas
dc.creator Tschirley, David
dc.creator Liverpool-Tasie, Saweda
dc.creator Awokuse, Titus
dc.creator Alphonce, Roselyne
dc.creator Ndyetabula, Daniel
dc.creator Waized, Betty
dc.date 2021-08-04T05:29:22Z
dc.date 2021-08-04T05:29:22Z
dc.date 2021
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:51:54Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:51:54Z
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/3817
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/91890
dc.description Journal Article
dc.description We study household consumption of various categories of processed food, includ ing ultra-processed food and meals away from home in Tanzania. We compare peri-urban versus hinterland rural areas, and large cities versus small towns. Three sets of findings stand out. (1) Contrary to the common view in Africa that processed food is mainly an urban middle-class phenomenon, we found it has penetrated the diets of the rural areas and the rural and urban poor. In rural areas, surprisingly 60% of food consumption comes from purchases in value terms, and processed food accounts for 76% of purchases and 47% of all food consumed. For the rural poor, purchased processed food is 38% of food consumption. In urban areas processed food’s share of purchases (hence consumption) is 78%, similar for the rich and poor. (2) We found that ultra-processed food (such as sugar-sweetened beverages and cookies) and meals-away-from-home (MAFH) have emerged as important in urban as well as rural areas. As these foods tend to be high in oil, salt, and sugar, this is a health concern. The share of ultra processed foods and MAFH is 21% in rural areas and 36% in cities albeit twice as high in large cities compared with small towns and among richer compared to poorer consumers. (3) Our regressions show the spread of processed food con sumption in rural and urban areas, among the rich and poor, is driven mainly by opportunity costs of the time of women and men, and thus the pursuit of sav ing home-processing and cooking time, as well as food environment factors. As these drivers are long term trends this suggests processed food consumption will continue to grow
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher WILEY
dc.subject Africa
dc.subject consumption
dc.subject food away from home
dc.subject peri-urban
dc.subject processed food
dc.subject secondary cities
dc.subject small towns
dc.title Consumption of processed food & food away from home in big cities, small towns, and rural areas of Tanzania
dc.type Article


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