Abstract

Taking a food systems approach is a promising strategy for improving diets. Implementing such an approach would require the use of a comprehensive set of metrics to characterize food systems, set meaningful goals, track food system performance, and evaluate the impacts of food system interventions. Food system metrics are also useful to structure debates and communicate to policy makers and the general public. This paper provides an updated analytical framework of food systems and uses this to identify systematically relevant metrics and indicators based on data availability in low and middle income countries. We conclude that public data are relatively well available for food system drivers and outcomes, but not for all of the food system activities. With only minor additional investments, existing surveys could be extended to cover a large part of the required additional data. For some indicators, however, targeted data collection efforts are needed. As the list of indicators partly overlaps with the indicators for the Sustainable Development Goals (SGDs), part of the collected data could serve not only to describe and monitor food systems, but also to track progress towards attaining the SDGs.

Highlights

  • Improving diets features high on the global development agenda

  • The information from a comprehensive set of food system metrics could be used by decision-makers to identify leverage points for intervention and investments at both sub-national and national levels

  • Data on food system metrics can serve as input in policy discussions and, together with foresight analysis, feed into participatory scenario analysis to discuss trade-offs and synergies (Rutten et al, 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

Improving diets features high on the global development agenda. A notable share of the world population faces at least one of the three forms of malnutrition—undernutrition, micronutrient malnutrition, or overweight and obesity While diets are rapidly changing, they are not necessarily improving (Pingali, 2007; Popkin, 2014). Dietary transitions typically imply increased consumption of animal fats, sugars, and processed foods (Hawkes et al, 2012; Imamura et al, 2015). To stimulate changes towards healthier diets, numerous policies, projects, and programs have been implemented (e.g. Fiorella et al, 2016; Allen and De Brauw, 2018). These interventions often narrowly focus on specific consumer groups or foods and rarely take a whole diet approach

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