USDA Archives - Best Food Facts Tue, 29 Nov 2016 22:37:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 A Big Day for Cooking https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/a-big-day-for-cooking/ https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/a-big-day-for-cooking/#respond Wed, 23 Nov 2016 19:07:46 +0000 https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/?p=6329 What will you be doing on Thanksgiving Day? For many of us, it is a big day for cooking. Just how big? On average, Americans spend 128 minutes – just over two hours – on meal preparation on Thanksgiving Day, according to research by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That time is more than three...

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What will you be doing on Thanksgiving Day?

For many of us, it is a big day for cooking. Just how big? On average, Americans spend 128 minutes – just over two hours – on meal preparation on Thanksgiving Day, according to research by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

That time is more than three times the 34 minutes that we spend on those tasks on the typical Saturday or Sunday.

We also spend more time eating. No surprise there! On Thanksgiving, we’ll spend about an hour and a half at the dinner table. We’ll also be socializing with friends and family for about 148 minutes.

The other big activity on Thanksgiving Day is watching television and movies. The study didn’t specify how much of that time is actually spent napping, which we suspect is a big Thanksgiving Day activity.

How much will you be cooking this holiday? Let us know in the comments and vote in our poll for your favorite Thanksgiving foods.

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“Elimination of farm subsidies will reduce obesity and associated health problems.” https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/true-or-not-farm-subsidies-obesity/ https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/true-or-not-farm-subsidies-obesity/#respond Sat, 02 Nov 2013 18:29:33 +0000 //www.bestfoodfacts.org/?p=3542 Many advocates argue that U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) policies that establish farm prices for crops, provide subsidies to farmers and provide consumers with access to an abundant and affordable food supply are responsible for the increasing number of adults and children facing the challenges of obesity and diabetes. However, Julian M. Alston, with the...

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Many advocates argue that U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) policies that establish farm prices for crops, provide subsidies to farmers and provide consumers with access to an abundant and affordable food supply are responsible for the increasing number of adults and children facing the challenges of obesity and diabetes. However, Julian M. Alston, with the University of California-Davis Department of Agriculture and Resource Economics, says his research shows that eliminating farm subsidies would do little to change obesity rates, noting that consumers do not necessarily change food purchases patterns based on cost and that advances in technology and efficiencies on the farm have more to do with the low cost of today’s food than USDA policies and programs.

True or Not? “Elimination of farm subsidies will reduce obesity and associated health problems.”

false

Julian Alston, PhD says:

Research shows that eliminating farm subsidies would do little to change obesity rates.

U.S. farm policies have had a negligible effect on the consumer price of food and food consumption. While many arguments can be made for changing farm subsidies, entirely eliminating the current programs would not have any significant influence on obesity trends.

Obesity has increased rapidly in the United States and in many other countries. The proximal cause of obesity is simple and not disputed: people consume more food energy than they use. Farm subsidies could have contributed to lower relative prices and increased consumption of fattening foods by making certain farm commodities more abundant and therefore cheaper. However, each of several component elements must be true for farm subsidies to have had a significant effect on obesity rates.

  • First, farm subsidies must have made farm commodities significantly more abundant and cheaper.
  • Second, the lower commodity prices caused by farm subsidies must have resulted in significantly lower costs to the food industry
  • Third, the cost savings to the food marketing firms must have been passed on to consumers in the form of lower prices of food.
  • Fourth, food consumption patterns must have changed significantly in response to these policy-induced changes in prices.

In fact, the magnitude of the impact in each of these steps is zero or small, so the overall effect is negligible. Let us consider each step briefly.

First, farm subsidies have had very modest (and mixed) effects on the total availability and prices of farm commodities that are the most important ingredients in more-fattening foods. U.S. farm subsidy policies include both Farm Bill programs and trade barriers that raise U.S. farm prices and incomes for favored commodities. These policies support farm incomes either through transfers from taxpayers, or at the expense of consumers, or both. Thus, they might make agricultural commodities cheaper or more expensive and might therefore increase or reduce the cost of certain types of food. Indeed, for several important food products (dairy, sugar, and orange juice) that have been associated with obesity, barriers to imports are used to raise the prices paid by consumers in order to support the prices received by producers. In fact, balancing the effects of these types of policies with policies that make other food commodities cheaper (such as corn, wheat, and soybeans), the effect of farm price support policies has been to make food commodities overall a little more expensive for buyers.

Second, such small commodity price impacts would imply very small effects on costs of food at retail, which, even if fully passed on to consumers, would mean even smaller percentage changes in prices faced by consumers. The cost of farm commodities as ingredients represents only a small share of the cost of retail food products; on average about 20 percent, and much less for products such as soda and for meals away from home, which are often implicated in the rise in obesity. Hence, a very large percentage change in commodity prices would be required to have an appreciable percentage effect on food prices.

Third, given that food consumption is relatively unresponsive to changes in market prices, the very small food price changes induced by U.S. farm subsidies could not have had large effects on food consumption patterns. Simple causation from farm subsidies to obesity is also inconsistent with international patterns across countries. For example, obesity trends for adult males and children in Australia are similar to those in the United States, but Australia phased out its farm commodity programs, over the 1980s and 1990s.

Corn is often the target of criticism as a contributor to obesity, especially because of its use to make high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) which is used as a caloric sweetener in many foods and beverages. The use of HFCS as a sweetener has been encouraged by U.S. sugar policy that made sugar much more expensive and gave food manufacturers economic incentive to substitute HFCS for sugar. Corn itself does receive subsidies that encourage production and have made it cheaper and more abundant for consumers in the past. But even for corn the subsidies have not had a very large effect—increases in availability and reductions in buyer prices for the farm commodity of well less than 10 percent in the years of greatest subsidy, and much less than that in recent years given the high world market prices and the demand for corn as feedstock for ethanol plants. Most corn is actually consumed in the form of meat or dairy products. Corn and other feedstuff represent less 8 percent of the retail cost of meat such that a 10 percent cut in the farm price of corn would imply at most a 0.8 percent reduction in the retail price of meat facing consumers. Similar calculations apply for other retail foods. Consequently, eliminating corn subsidies could not be expected to have large and favorable effects on consumer incentives to eat more-healthy diets such that obesity rates would be meaningfully reduced.

The sweetener market merits some explicit discussion. Farm subsidies are responsible for the growth in the use of corn to produce high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) as a caloric sweetener, but not in the way it is often suggested. The culprit here is not corn subsidies; rather, it is sugar policy that has restricted imports, driven up the U.S. price of sugar, and encouraged the replacement of sugar with alternative caloric sweeteners. Combining the sugar policy with the corn policy, the net effect of farm subsidies has been to increase the price of caloric sweeteners generally, and to discourage total consumption while causing a shift within the category between sugar and HFCS. In this context, eliminating the subsidy policies would result in cheaper caloric sweeteners and, if anything, more rather than less total consumption of sweeteners, with a switch in the mix back towards sugar.

Farm commodities have indeed become much more abundant and cheaper over the past 50 years in the world as a whole as well as in the United States, but not because of subsidies. This abundance mainly reflects the effects of technological innovations and increases in farm productivity that have rescued billions of the world’s poor from the shackles of poverty and starvation, while at the same time reducing pressure on the world’s natural resources. If cheaper and more abundant food has contributed to obesity, then we should look to agricultural innovation rather than farm subsidies as the fundamental cause. Even so, it would be a dreadful mistake to seek to oppose and slow agricultural innovation with a view to reducing obesity rates. Conversely, though it might be beneficial in other ways, eliminating U.S. farm subsidies would have negligible consequences for obesity rates. The challenge for policy makers is to find other—more effective and more economically rational—ways to reduce the social consequences of excess food consumption while at the same time enhancing consumption opportunities for the poor and protecting the world’s resources for future generations.

Further Reading

Alston, J.M., D.A. Sumner, and S.A. Vosti. “Are Agricultural Policies Making Us Fat? Likely Links between Agricultural Policies and Human Nutrition and Obesity, and Their Policy Implications.” Review of Agricultural Economics 28(3)(Fall 2006): 313-322.

Alston, J.M., D.A. Sumner, and S.A. Vosti, “Farm Subsidies and Obesity in the United States: National Evidence and International Comparisons.” Food Policy 33(6) (December 2008): 470-479.

Read More

20150624-FFAS-LSC-0087” by U.S. Department of Agriculture is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

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Smarter Snacking at School: New Standards for Vending Machines https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/smarter-snacking-school/ https://www.bestfoodfacts.org/smarter-snacking-school/#respond Wed, 11 Sep 2013 14:30:38 +0000 //www.bestfoodfacts.org/?p=421 The USDA’s new Smart Snacks in School nutrition standards attempt to balance science-based nutrition guidelines with practical and flexible solutions to promote healthier eating for students. The proposed standards were introduced earlier this summer and are scheduled to take effect for the 2014-2015 school year. Are the standards reasonable? How will students react to them?...

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The USDA’s new Smart Snacks in School nutrition standards attempt to balance science-based nutrition guidelines with practical and flexible solutions to promote healthier eating for students. The proposed standards were introduced earlier this summer and are scheduled to take effect for the 2014-2015 school year. Are the standards reasonable? How will students react to them? We went to Lauren Headrick of the University of Florida, a registered dietitian and statewide coordinator of the Florida Farm to School program, for some insight.

What’s the reasoning behind these new snacking standards for schools?

These standards align the snack items that will be available with the dietary restrictions already set for the National School Lunch and School Breakfast programs. Currently, there aren’t any rules or guidelines for snack foods sold in schools. This means that there are no limits on the calorie content of what’s offered. That said, some states have rules – for instance, in Florida, elementary schools have rules about when vending machines are available to the kids and what types of sodas or food items are offered.

With the new standards, snack foods are going to be much more nutrient-dense. For elementary and middle schools, the only drinks that will be offered are milk, water and 100 percent juices. Drinks containing caffeine, such as diet sodas, will be available in high schools, but there will be limits on how much sugar they can contain. In addition to focusing on nutrient density, the standards focus on eliminating drink and snack options that are high in sugar. As for salty snacks, sodium levels will be slowly reduced over the next few years. There will be limitations on the fat content, too.

Will these new rules be effective and how do you think students will react to the new snacks?

Actually, schools that are participating in the HealthierUS School Challenge program area already complying with these new standards. There’s an extensive list of snacks and drinks that schools can offer that meet the certification requirements. For instance, ice cream is on the list. It’s reduced fat ice cream, but it’s allowed. There are baked chips, reduced fat cookies and reduced-sugar fruit snacks as well. So, to me, there are plenty of options that will meet the nutrition requirements that can be substituted for less nutrient-dense alternatives that are currently offered.

We’re urging schools to begin offering these new items that will meet the new Smart Snacks standards and they can start gauging which ones sell and which ones don’t. Why wait until next year and having to revamp their entire competitive foods list?

Some are concerned that these new standards will cost local school districts money. What are your thoughts?

There is a worry that schools are going to have reduced sales – especially at the high school level. If they start changing now, I think they can get ahead of the game when these standards take effect in 2014. They can figure out ahead of time which snacks students find acceptable and which ones just will not sell. But kids are very adaptable. Schools might see a brief dip in the amount of money they’re making from the sales of some of these snack items but I think it will even back out over time.

In schools where these standards are already being adhered to, what has been the student reaction?

In my experience, younger kids tend to deal with it a little better. As an example, high school age students tend to get upset if you take away sports drinks. But, I think they will ultimately accept these new snacks standards as well. Another benefit is that I believe the food industry will also respond to the needs of the school districts and offer new items that will meet these standards.

Some students will bring what they want to eat from home, and others will simply leave campus to find the foods they’re used to eating. There’s no way around that. But I think if schools will be proactive and begin experimenting with some of these new items before the standards are mandatory, they can avoid some of the backlash that might accompany sudden implementation of the new rules. I think for most items that don’t meet the new standards, there will be an acceptable substitute that students will accept.

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Vending Machine” by Sharon & Nikki McCutcheon is licensed under CC BY.

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