Personal tools
You are here: Home / Publications / More or better? Measuring quality versus quantity in food consumption

Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

More or better? Measuring quality versus quantity in food consumption

Manig, Corinna; & Moneta, Alessio. (2013). More or better? Measuring quality versus quantity in food consumption. Journal of Bioeconomics, 16(2), 155-78.

Manig, Corinna; & Moneta, Alessio. (2013). More or better? Measuring quality versus quantity in food consumption. Journal of Bioeconomics, 16(2), 155-78.

Octet Stream icon 2667.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1,291 bytes)

As people become richer they get the opportunity of consuming more but also qualitatively better goods. This holds for a basic commodity like food as well. We investigate food consumption in Russia, taking into account both expenditure and nutrition value in terms of calories. We analyse how food consumption patterns change with increasing income by considering both “quantity Engel curves” and “quality Engel curves.” The former describe the functional dependence of calories consumed on total expenditure. The latter trace out the dependence of unit value per calorie on total expenditure. We compare income elasticities of quantity with income elasticities of unit value and quality. In Russian household survey data for years 2000–2002 the reaction of quality to income changes is significantly stronger than the reaction of quantity to income changes suggesting that Russian households tend to choose higher quality food items as income rises.




JOUR



Manig, Corinna
Moneta, Alessio



2013


Journal of Bioeconomics

16

2

155-78






1387-6996

10.1007/s10818-013-9174-4



2667