1 / 18

Food Consumption Indicators: Results from HBS 31 May 2012

This presentation provides background information on food consumption statistics, data available, and the use of food quantities collected in the Household Budget Survey. It includes summary results, main conclusions, and recommendations.

lesliel
Télécharger la présentation

Food Consumption Indicators: Results from HBS 31 May 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Food consumption indicators:Results using data collected from HBS31 May 2012Ana Martinez and Renata Del Rosario Eurostat - Unit F5

  2. Structure of this presentation • Background • Food quantities - Data available • Using food quantities from HBS • Summary results • Main conclusions and recommendations Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  3. Background – Food consumption statistics • Aim: basic statistical data on food consumption in a sustainable and harmonised way (within the ESS) • Work started in 2005: • Task Force set up to identify • The needs for data on food consumption • The main determinants for food consumption • First analysis of available data sources: DAFNE (HBS), dietary surveys, Supply Balance Sheets • Work of Task Force in 2007: • Identification of feasible indicators related to ‘food safety’ (chemical contaminants) and ‘health and nutrition policies’ • In-depth examination of data sources: advantages and disadvantages • Food safety indicators: dietary surveys • Health and nutrition: DAFNE (HBS) or dietary surveys  Explore the use of food quantities collected in HBS Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  4. Background - Work carried out in 2008 • Written consultation in February 2008: members of “Living conditions” Working Group • Possibilities and willingness to provide the data on food quantities collected already within the HBS 2005 wave • 21 countries willing to submit collected food quantities from HBS: • Aggregated tables (average food quantities per adult equivalent): • Czech Republic, Germany, The Netherlands, Portugal • Micro-data files at household level, for: • Belgium, Bulgaria, Estonia, Greece, Spain, France, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, Slovak Republic, Finland, United Kingdom, Norway • 8 countries did not collect food quantities: • Denmark, Italy, Luxembourg , Cyprus, Austria, Sweden and Iceland Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  5. Food quantities - Data transmitted to EurostatReference period • Aggregated tables by adult equivalent: • 2003: Germany • 2004: The Netherlands • 2005: Czech Republic • 2005/2006: Portugal • Micro-data files at household level: • 2004: Spain, Slovenia • 2004/2005: Greece • 2005: Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Poland, United Kingdom • 2006: Slovak Republic, Finland • 2005-2007: Norway • 2007: Romania • 2008: Malta Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  6. Using data on food quantities from HBSLinking micro-data files at household level • Food quantities purchased by households • Survey reference year (HA02) • Household ID number (HA04) • Food quantities purchased (HQxxxxx) • Household expenditure • Household ID number (HA04) • Household adult equivalent (HB06.2) • Household size (HB05) • Weights (HA10) • Region (HA08) • Population density (HA09) • Type of household (HB07.1, HB07.2) • Educational level of household head (HC08) • Sex of reference person (HC03) • Age of reference person (HC04) • Activity status of reference person (HC12, HC16) • Occupation ISCO 1988 of reference person (HC18) • Socioeconomic situation of reference person (HC23, HC24) • Net income of household (HH09.9) Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  7. Using food quantities from HBS Objective • Calculation of mean daily consumption of all COICOP items by person: - Indicators: • Mean daily consumption of vegetables • Mean daily consumption of fruit • Mean daily consumption of ‘sugar containing beverages’ - Mean daily consumption of all COICOP 4 and 5 digit items - Mean daily consumption of all above items by identified consumption determinants: • Population density (HA09) • Educational level of household head (HC08) • Net income of household (HH09.9) – quartile Including Standard Deviation, Max and Min values, Confidence Interval at 95% level Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  8. Using food quantities from HBS - Results • Doc ESTAT/F5/ES/204 Rev.1 • Sent 11 January 2012 to all HBS national experts participating to the Working group “Statistics on Living conditions” : • Detailed results for 16 countries: • Belgium, Bulgaria, Estonia, Greece, Spain, France, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Malta, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, Slovak Republic, United Kingdom, Norway • Tables with annual and daily mean food availability per person • ~ 58 food items covering: Bread and cereals, meat, fish, dairy products, eggs, fats and oils, fruit, vegetables, potatoes, sugar and confectionary products, beverages (alcoholic and non-alcoholic) • Methodology used to compute the above mentioned indicators • Main conclusions of the project and recommendations in case the project would continue for future HBS waves Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  9. Results: Mean daily food quantities per person (g/day) Meat: beef, pork, sheep & goats, poultry Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  10. Results: Mean daily food quantities per person (g/day) Fruit (& fruit juices), vegetables, potatoes Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  11. Educational level of household head Analysis by consumption determinants Primary education: Primary school and first phase of secondary school (levels 1 and 2 of ISCED) Secondary education: Second phase of secondary education (levels 3 and 4 of ISCED) Higher education: Higher education (levels 5 and 6 of ISCED) Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  12. Educational level of household head Analysis by consumption determinants Primary education: Primary school and first phase of secondary school (levels 1 and 2 of ISCED) Secondary education: Second phase of secondary education (levels 3 and 4 of ISCED) Higher education: Higher education (levels 5 and 6 of ISCED) Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  13. Type of settlement (Population density) Analysis by consumption determinants Densely populated: >= 500 inhabitants/km2 Intermediate: between 100 and 499 inhabitants/km2 Sparsely populated: < 100 inhabitants/km2 Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  14. Type of settlement (Population density) Analysis by consumption determinants Densely populated: >= 500 inhabitants/km2 Intermediate: between 100 and 499 inhabitants/km2 Sparsely populated: < 100 inhabitants/km2 Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  15. Net Income Analysis by consumption determinants Lowest group: income between lowest net income and first quartile Mediu lowest: between the first quartile and the median Medium highest: between the median and the third quartile Highest group: between the third quartile and the highest net income Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  16. Conclusions • Relative standard errors of the mean food availability at COICOP 4 and 5 digits are rather low, also for the aggregates “fruit” and “vegetables” • HBS food quantities could be used for estimating: • Mean daily food availability per person • at 4 and 5 COICOP-digits, • for estimating two nutrition-related indicators: “fruit consumption” and “consumption of vegetables” • Not for estimating other more complex indicators for monitoring nutrition policy (sugar containing beverages, energy intake, dietary fibre, Calcium, Sodium, etc.): • would need more detailed data • would need expertise of nutritionists (not Eurostat’s role) Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  17. Recommendations If Member States agree on continuing this project: • Use a blank for “missing values” and 0 for real 0 • Indicate always the unit of measurement used for each food item, if different than that proposed by Eurostat • Use COICOP for coding the food items • Provide food quantities at both, 4 and 5 digit levels of COICOP • Indicate the reference period of food quantities data collected and submitted to Eurostat • Provide food quantities including food purchased + food available in kind Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

  18. Thank you for your attention Working Group Living Conditions - Eurostat - Luxembourg 29-31 May 2012

More Related