Integrating food poverty and minimum cost diet methods into a single framework: a case study using a Nepalese household expenditure survey

Food Nutr Bull. 2014 Jun;35(2):151-9. doi: 10.1177/156482651403500201.

Abstract

Background: Current tools assessing affordability of nutritious diets are incomplete. "Food poverty" uses expenditure data to identify households unable to acquire a diet adequate in energy but does not consider other nutrients. The "minimum cost of a nutritious diet" method provides a threshold for purchasing a nutritious diet but must rely on other data to identify "nutrient-poor" households.

Objective: Integrating both methods into a single framework using a common data source, we sought to jointly estimate the proportions of a population that are food and nutrient poor.

Methods: Household expenditure data from the 2010/11 Nepal Living Standards Survey were used, focusing on representative samples of households from the mountain region (n = 401) and Kathmandu (n = 857). Food poverty thresholds were set at the cost for a low-income household to purchase a basket of foods providing adequate energy following the Cost of Basic Need method. Linear optimization was used to calculate a "nutrient poverty" threshold. Household expenditures were used to determine food and nutrient poverty rates.

Results: The food and nutrient poverty thresholds were 13,294 and 18,628 rupees/person/year, respectively, in the mountain region and 14,610 and 22,945 rupees/ person/year, respectively, in Kathmandu. In the mountain region, 34% of households were both food and nutrient poor and 24% were just nutrient poor. In Kathmandu the percentages were 7% and 14%, respectively.

Conclusions: This approach, integrating two commonly used tools, provides a more nuanced interpretation of economic access to a nutritious diet and an opportunity to improve the design and targeting of nutrition and food security interventions.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Child
  • Costs and Cost Analysis*
  • Diet / economics*
  • Dietary Fats
  • Dietary Proteins
  • Energy Intake
  • Family Characteristics
  • Female
  • Food / economics*
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Male
  • Micronutrients
  • Middle Aged
  • Nepal
  • Nutritive Value*
  • Poverty / economics*
  • Socioeconomic Factors

Substances

  • Dietary Fats
  • Dietary Proteins
  • Micronutrients