2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.gfs.2020.100361
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Urbanization, processed foods, and eating out in India

Abstract: Urban consumption of processed and fast foods is a challenge to nutrition security. Observed differences in urban versus rural consumption are commonly attributed to higher income levels in urban areas. Yet, there is still no clear understanding why and how urban dwellers consume differently. Using India as case study, we analyze expenditure on processed foods and consumption of food away from home (FAFH) of urban, metropolitan, and rural populations using OLS regression models. We show that urban households s… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(23 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(44 reference statements)
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“…These dietary shifts, alongside increasing availability and promotion of unhealthy foods, have been well defined as the ‘nutrition transition’ 14,15 in prior literature on LMICs and in low‐income communities of HICs 134 . Dietary shifts from traditional food towards more eating away from home and consuming convenience food high in sugar has been observed in other LMICs following migration to urban centres 27,135,136 . Participants have also observed changes in urban planning, which caused limited access to aesthetic, safe and secure recreation spaces or facilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…These dietary shifts, alongside increasing availability and promotion of unhealthy foods, have been well defined as the ‘nutrition transition’ 14,15 in prior literature on LMICs and in low‐income communities of HICs 134 . Dietary shifts from traditional food towards more eating away from home and consuming convenience food high in sugar has been observed in other LMICs following migration to urban centres 27,135,136 . Participants have also observed changes in urban planning, which caused limited access to aesthetic, safe and secure recreation spaces or facilities.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…High seed quality is one of the measures for evaluating the nutritional value of food, which can result in greater economic benefits in a competitive market 23 . Maintaining soil fertility is also fundamental for building an input‐based high agricultural production system, which has the potential to increase resilience of food demand to increasing population, climate change, and urbanization 1,2,54 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Achieving global food security is a complex problem arising from a number of challenges such as increasing population, climate change, and urbanization 1–3 . To maintain or increase crop yields, chemical fertilizers have historically been mismanaged, resulting in environmental pollution and decreased nutrient‐use efficiency 4–6 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dietary diversity is a proxy for nutrient adequacy ( FAO 2010 ) and is inferred from estimates of the nutrient content and frequency of consumption of foods from different food groups, elicited through individual and household surveys ( Zezza et al, 2017 , Ruel, 2003a , WFP, 2008 ). We are learning more of the gaps in rural and urban populations in terms of access to more diverse diets, i.e., those richer in fruits and vegetables, and about less-nutritious patterns of consumption of processed foods and beverages ( Penny et al, 2017 , Law et al, 2019 , Bren d’Amour et al, 2020 ), and the differential distributional impacts of temporal, spatial and socioeconomic dimensions of local food environments ( Duran et al, 2016 , Flores-Martínez et al, 2016 , Sibhatu and Qaim, 2017 , Bakker et al, 2018 , Poole et al, 2019 , Zanello et al, 2019 ).…”
Section: Shifting Agri-nutrition Prioritiesmentioning
confidence: 99%