Working Paper

You Are What (and Where) You Eat : Capturing Food Away from Home in Welfare Measures

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collection.link.5
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/9
collection.name.5
Policy Research Working Papers
dc.contributor.author
Farfan, Gabriela
dc.contributor.author
Genoni, Maria Eugenia
dc.contributor.author
Vakis, Renos
dc.date.accessioned
2015-06-01T22:28:27Z
dc.date.available
2015-06-01T22:28:27Z
dc.date.issued
2015-05
dc.date.lastModified
2021-04-23T14:04:06Z
dc.description.abstract
Consumption of food away from home is rapidly growing across the developing world. Surprisingly, the majority of household surveys around the world haven not kept up with its pace and still collect limited information on it. The implications for poverty and inequality measurement are far from clear, and the direction of the impact cannot be established a priori, since consumption of food away from home affects both food consumption and the poverty line. This paper exploits rich data on food away from home collected as part of the National Household Survey in Peru, shedding light to the extent to which welfare measures differ depending on whether they properly account for food away from home. Peru is a relevant context, with the average Peruvian household spending 28 percent of their food budget on food away from home by 2010. The analysis indicates that failure to account for the consumption of food away from home has important implications for poverty and inequality measures as well as the understanding of who the poor are. First, accounting for food away from home results in extreme poverty rates that are 18 percent higher and moderate poverty rates that are 16 percent lower. These results are also consistent, in fact more pronounced, with poverty gap and severity measures. Second, consumption inequality measured by the Gini coefficient decreases by 1.3 points when food away from home is included, a significant reduction. Finally, inclusion of food away from home results in a reclassification of households from poor to non-poor status and vice versa: 20 percent of the poor are different when the analysis includes consumption of food away from home. This effect is large enough that a standard poverty profile analysis results in significant differences between the poverty classification based on whether food away from home is included or not. The differences cover many dimensions, including demographics, education, and labor market characteristics. Taken together, the results indicate that a serious rethinking of how to deal with the consumption of food away from home in measuring well-being is urgently needed to properly estimate and understand poverty around the world.
en
dc.identifier
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/05/24442714/eat-capturing-food-away-home-welfare-measures
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21987
dc.language
English
dc.language.iso
en_US
dc.publisher
World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.relation.ispartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7257
dc.rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder
World Bank
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.subject
REGIONAL POVERTY LINES
dc.subject
LIVING STANDARDS
dc.subject
POVERTY POVERTY
dc.subject
FOOD NEEDS
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
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HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
dc.subject
POVERTY LINE
dc.subject
IMPACT ON POVERTY
dc.subject
ECONOMIC GROWTH
dc.subject
FOOD CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
dc.subject
FOOD CONSUMPTION
dc.subject
INCOME
dc.subject
POVERTY INDICES
dc.subject
POVERTY RATES
dc.subject
POVERTY ESTIMATES
dc.subject
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
dc.subject
CONSUMPTION DATA
dc.subject
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
dc.subject
HOUSING
dc.subject
NATIONAL POVERTY
dc.subject
EXTREME POVERTY LINE
dc.subject
INEQUALITY REDUCTION
dc.subject
NON-FOOD ITEMS
dc.subject
PER-CAPITA INCOME
dc.subject
FOOD CONSUMPTION DATA
dc.subject
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
dc.subject
FOOD ENERGY
dc.subject
MEASURES
dc.subject
FOOD ENERGY INTAKE
dc.subject
WELFARE INDICATOR
dc.subject
REGION
dc.subject
POVERTY REDUCTION
dc.subject
PREPARED FOODS
dc.subject
CONSUMPTION DISTRIBUTION
dc.subject
REGIONAL POVERTY
dc.subject
FOOD BASKET
dc.subject
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
dc.subject
POOR HOUSEHOLD
dc.subject
POVERTY INDEXES
dc.subject
POVERTY GAP
dc.subject
GEOGRAPHIC REGIONS
dc.subject
LIVING STANDARDS MEASUREMENT
dc.subject
STANDARD ERRORS
dc.subject
NUTRITION NEEDS
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
dc.subject
POVERTY STATUS
dc.subject
POOR INDIVIDUALS
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
dc.subject
FOOD EXPENDITURES
dc.subject
ESCAPE’ POVERTY
dc.subject
CALORIE INTAKE
dc.subject
WELFARE INDICATORS
dc.subject
POVERTY PROFILES
dc.subject
CHANGES IN POVERTY
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS
dc.subject
CONSUMPTION LEVEL
dc.subject
EXPENDITURE DATA
dc.subject
POVERTY PROFILE
dc.subject
FOOD ITEMS
dc.subject
STREET FOODS
dc.subject
RELATIVE POVERTY LINE
dc.subject
CA
dc.subject
DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
dc.subject
POVERTY LINES
dc.subject
CONSUMPTION
dc.subject
FOOD SECURITY
dc.subject
UNDERSTANDING OF POVERTY
dc.subject
POVERTY INDEX
dc.subject
RUNNING WATER
dc.subject
ACCESS TO FACILITIES
dc.subject
REDUCTION IN POVERTY
dc.subject
POVERTY MEASUREMENT
dc.subject
BASIC NEEDS
dc.subject
INDIVIDUAL POVERTY
dc.subject
DEVELOPMENT ISSUES
dc.subject
MEAN INCOME
dc.subject
NON-FOOD NEEDS
dc.subject
GEOGRAPHIC REGION
dc.subject
CONSUMPTION MEASURE
dc.subject
ABSOLUTE POVERTY
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD
dc.subject
AGRICULTURE
dc.subject
FOOD SHORTAGE
dc.subject
RURAL
dc.subject
PRICE INFORMATION
dc.subject
NUTRITION
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD BUDGET
dc.subject
FOOD
dc.subject
POVERTY SEVERITY
dc.subject
SCHOOL FEEDING
dc.subject
POVERTY INDICATORS
dc.subject
FOOD_CONSUMPTION
dc.subject
POOR POPULATION
dc.subject
FOOD BASKETS
dc.subject
WELFARE MEASURES
dc.subject
FOOD SHARE
dc.subject
CALORIE CONTENT
dc.subject
FOOD INTAKE
dc.subject
REGIONS
dc.subject
EXTREME POVERTY
dc.subject
CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
dc.subject
ACCESS TO SERVICES
dc.subject
ABSOLUTE POVERTY LINE
dc.subject
RURAL AREAS
dc.subject
POVERTY
dc.subject
BASIC NEEDS METHOD
dc.subject
POOR POPULATIONS
dc.subject
ABSOLUTE TERMS
dc.subject
RESTAURANTS
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
dc.subject
MEAL
dc.subject
NUTRITIONAL COMPOSITION
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES
dc.subject
POLICY RESEARCH
dc.subject
POVERTY RATE
dc.subject
POOR
dc.subject
WELFARE MEASURE
dc.subject
INDIVIDUAL LEVEL
dc.subject
OFFICIAL POVERTY
dc.subject
FOODS
dc.subject
EXPENDITURE DISTRIBUTION
dc.subject
HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURE
dc.subject
FOOD ITEM
dc.subject
COST OF FOOD
dc.subject
DEMOGRAPHIC COMPOSITION
dc.subject
POVERTY ANALYSIS
dc.subject
INEQUALITY
dc.subject
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
dc.title
You Are What (and Where) You Eat
en
dc.title.subtitle
Capturing Food Away from Home in Welfare Measures
en
dc.type
Working Paper
en
okr.associatedcontent
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/29169 Accepted journal manuscript
okr.date.disclosure
2015-05-05
okr.doctype
Publications & Research
okr.doctype
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
okr.docurl
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/05/24442714/eat-capturing-food-away-home-welfare-measures
okr.globalpractice
Poverty
okr.googlescholar.linkpresent
yes
okr.identifier.doi
10.1596/1813-9450-7257
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum
090224b082e42633_2_0
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum
24442714
okr.identifier.report
WPS7257
okr.language.supported
en
okr.pdfurl
http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/WDSContentServer/WDSP/IB/2015/05/05/090224b082e42633/2_0/Rendered/PDF/You0are0what0000in0welfare0measures.pdf
en
okr.region.country
Peru
okr.topic
Industry :: Food & Beverage Industry
okr.topic
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Regional Economic Development
okr.topic
Poverty Reduction :: Poverty Lines
okr.topic
Poverty Reduction :: Rural Poverty Reduction
okr.unit
Surveys and Methods Team, Development Research Group; and the Poverty Global Practice Group

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