MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Box 285 Institute of Metabolic Science, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, UK.
MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Box 285 Institute of Metabolic Science, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, UK.
Appetite. 2024 Jun 1;197:107290. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2024.107290. Epub 2024 Mar 8.
Food prices and affordability play an important role in influencing dietary choices, which in turn have implications for public health. With inflationary increases in the cost-of-living in the UK since 2021, understanding the dynamics of food prices becomes increasingly important. In this longitudinal study, we aimed to examine changes in food prices from 2013 to 2023 by food group and by food healthiness. We established a dataset spanning the years 2013-2023 by combining price data from the UK Consumer Price Index for food and beverage items with nutrient and food data from the UK nutrient databank and UK Department of Health & Social Care's National Diet and Nutrition Survey data. We calculated the price (£/100 kcal) for each food item by year as well as before and during the period of inflationary pressure, and classified items into food groups according to the UK Eatwell Guide and as either "more healthy" or "less healthy" using the UK nutrient profiling score model. In 2023, bread, rice, potatoes and pasta was cheapest (£0.12/100 kcal) and fruit and vegetables most expensive (£1.01/100 kcal). Less healthy food was cheaper than more healthy food (£0.33/100 kcal versus £0.81/100 kcal). Before the inflationary pressure period (from 2013 to late 2021), the price of foods decreased by 3%. After this period, the price of food increased by 22%: relative increases were highest in the food group milk and dairy food (31%) and less healthy category (26%). While healthier foods saw smaller relative price increases since 2021, they remain more expensive, potentially exacerbating dietary inequalities. Policy responses should ensure food affordability and mitigate price disparities via, for example, healthy food subsidies.
食品价格和可负担性在影响饮食选择方面发挥着重要作用,而饮食选择又会对公众健康产生影响。自 2021 年以来,英国生活成本通胀上升,因此了解食品价格的动态变得越来越重要。在这项纵向研究中,我们旨在研究 2013 年至 2023 年期间按食品组和食品健康状况划分的食品价格变化。我们通过将英国消费者物价指数(CPI)中食品和饮料项目的价格数据与英国营养数据库和英国卫生与社会保健部国家饮食与营养调查数据中的营养和食品数据相结合,建立了一个涵盖 2013 年至 2023 年的数据集。我们按年计算每个食品项目的价格(£/100 千卡),以及在通胀压力期间之前和期间的价格,并根据英国饮食指南将项目分为食品组,同时使用英国营养成分评分模型将其归类为“更健康”或“不太健康”。2023 年,面包、大米、土豆和意大利面最便宜(£0.12/100 千卡),水果和蔬菜最贵(£1.01/100 千卡)。不健康食品比健康食品便宜(£0.33/100 千卡比 £0.81/100 千卡)。在通胀压力期(从 2013 年到 2021 年底)之前,食品价格下降了 3%。在此期间之后,食品价格上涨了 22%:涨幅最大的是奶类和奶制品食品组(31%)和不太健康的食品类别(26%)。虽然自 2021 年以来,更健康的食品价格涨幅相对较小,但它们仍然更贵,可能会加剧饮食不平等。政策应对措施应通过例如健康食品补贴来确保食品的可负担性并减轻价格差距。