2021
DOI: 10.1111/agec.12652
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Consumption of processed food & food away from home in big cities, small towns, and rural areas of Tanzania

Abstract: We study household consumption of various categories of processed food, including 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… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…With Africa's incomes and urbanization rising over the past couple of decades, diets and eating habits have been diversifying. This has boosted the demand for more nutrient dense (dairy, fruits, and vegetables, meat), and more convenient foods, in urban, but increasingly also in rural areas (Reardon et al, 2021;Sauer et al, 2021). A substantial share of off-farm rural employment is in the expanding agricultural value chains.…”
Section: The Agri-food Sectormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With Africa's incomes and urbanization rising over the past couple of decades, diets and eating habits have been diversifying. This has boosted the demand for more nutrient dense (dairy, fruits, and vegetables, meat), and more convenient foods, in urban, but increasingly also in rural areas (Reardon et al, 2021;Sauer et al, 2021). A substantial share of off-farm rural employment is in the expanding agricultural value chains.…”
Section: The Agri-food Sectormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hypothesised pathways include impact on dietary quality, food environment, physical inactivity at transportation, and breastfeeding practices. 4,13,15 For instance, in emerging economies like Tanzania, high household income can lead to consuming fast and ultra-processed food with low-nutrient density and shifting into unhealthy eating habits 35 , thereby worsening diet-related health outcomes. 27 Our findings indicate that double-duty actions promoting dietary diversity for children while simultaneously reducing total energy intake among mothers could be an effective strategy to address DBM in Tanzania.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mobile markets and food carts have been shown "smooth" access to perishable foods, with subsequent benefits for diet quality (HLPE, 2017). While the nature of retail outlets can affect the availability of nutritious foods, there is substantial overlap in the types of foods that vendors stock and sell (Sauer et al, 2021). Absent nonmarket restrictions or rigidities, food supply chains evolve to efficiently meet consumer demand (Faye et al, 2023).…”
Section: Availabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%