Abstract

To identify food choices allowing the fulfillment of nutritionally adequate diets resembling actual food patterns at the lowest cost achievable for the Brazilian population, stratified by income level. Food consumption and prices were obtained from the Household Budget Survey (n = 55,970 households) and National Dietary Survey (n = 32,749 individuals). The sample was stratified into capitals of the states and further by income levels according to the official minimum wage (totaling 108 geographic-economic strata, or GES). Linear programming models were performed for each GES in order to find the lowest cost of diets that meet a set of nutritional constraints. In order to find realistic diets, constraints referring to preferences were introduced in the models allowing optimized food quantities to depart progressively from the current intake for each food and food group. The impact of meeting each target nutrient was assessed by performing models removing each nutrient at the time. The observed and optimized diet costs were US$2.16 and US$2.58 per capita/day. The highest cost increment and the greatest food shifts were observed in the lowest income level. The nutrient adequacy was reached by mainly increasing fruits and vegetables, beans, fish and seafood, dairy, nuts, and eggs; and reducing red and processed meat, chicken, margarine and butter, cookies, cakes, sugar-sweetened beverages, and sauces. As the departure from the current intakes increase, the optimized healthy diet cost reduced. In the lowest income, the lowest cost increment was about US$ 0.10; in the higher income levels, it tended to be cheaper than the observed cost. Calcium was the most expensive nutrient to meet adequacy. Nutritionally adequate diets are possible but costlier than the observed.

Highlights

  • Nutrient intake recommendations, such as those from Dietary Reference Intakes, are used worldwide for several purposes in the nutrition field, especially for dietary planning and assessment [1], food guide development [2], and fortification and nutrition-related policies [3]

  • The highest cost increment and the greatest food shifts were observed in the lowest income level

  • The lowest cost increment was about US$ 0.10; in the higher income levels, it tended to be cheaper than the observed cost

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Summary

Introduction

Nutrient intake recommendations, such as those from Dietary Reference Intakes, are used worldwide for several purposes in the nutrition field, especially for dietary planning and assessment [1], food guide development [2], and fortification and nutrition-related policies [3]. Food prices are one of the most important determinants of food choices, and cost constraints are well-known barriers to the adoption of healthy food choices in populations with low-socioeconomic status (SES) [7]. Observational studies of dietary intake in Australia [8], UK [9], and France [10], have found that healthier diets tend to be more expensive than less-healthy diets, a finding later confirmed in the US [11] and worldwide [7,12]. If improvements of dietary intakes induce extra-cost to the consumer, they are not likely to be adopted in the population, especially in low SES populations, where a high percentage of the total income is already assigned to food purchase. Approximately 21% of households surveyed in Brazil within the Household Budget Survey 2008–2009 had a monthly income of less than two official minimum wages; in these households, the percentage of the total income spent on food was 27.8%, while this value for the whole population was 16.1% [16]

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