The Food Prices for Nutrition DataHub provides access to global statistics on the cost and affordability of healthy diets and related indicators. These data use food item availability and prices from the International Comparison Program (ICP), combined with food composition data and nutritional requirements from a wide range of sources including national dietary guidelines.
The 33 indicators and their metadata cover:
For further information on definitions and methods please refer to Methodology.
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DATA HIGHLIGHTS
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The Food Prices for Nutrition project was established to provide governments and development agencies with accurate and updated metrics to inform agricultural and food systems interventions.
The project’s outputs – indicators of the cost and affordability of diets and food groups and data for up to 174 countries - use observed consumer prices and household expenditures to provide an operational measure of people’s access to locally available foods in the proportions needed for health.
The new diet cost metrics developed for Food Prices for Nutrition underlie the estimates published in The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World that around 3 billion – or two in five people on the planet - cannot afford a healthy diet. These data were used to frame the 2021 UN Food System Summit summary and statement of action. In 2022, continuing global food price inflation and supply shocks further underscore the need for timely data on the cost and affordability of healthy diets and nutritious food items and groups. The Food Prices for Nutrition Datahub, as the authoritative source for internationally standardized statistics, indicators, and granular data, meets this need for a global cohort of policy makers, development analysts, and other users.
Food Prices for Nutrition supports efforts within the framework of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainable agriculture by 2030 (SDG 2). It can also support the monitoring of progress towards the World Bank’s objective of building food systems that can feed everyone, everywhere, every day by promoting “nutrition-sensitive agriculture” and improving food safety. FPN data assist policy makers and program analysts in guiding agricultural production and food distribution to ensure affordable healthy diets for all people at all times.
The Food Prices for Nutrition project is a partnership between Tufts University, the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and the World Bank. This project is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and UK Aid, through the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office of the United Kingdom.
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The Food Prices for Nutrition DataHub's diet cost and affordability indicators use the least cost combination of locally available foods to meet the needs of a representative adult requiring 2330 kcal per day at three levels of diet quality: a healthy diet; a nutrient adequate diet, and an energy sufficient diet. The initial results up to 174 countries are based on national average prices in 2017, expressed in terms of purchasing power parity dollars per day.
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COST INDICATORS
For each of the diets listed above, costs per day are based on requirements for a median adult woman aged 19-30 in a healthy population as defined by the World Health Organization. Information on the variation in the cost of nutrient adequacy by age, sex and reproductive status can be found in the Lancet article "Global variation in the cost of a nutrient-adequate diet by population group: an observational study" (Bai, Herforth and Masters 2022).
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AFFORDABILITY INDICATORS
The affordability of each diet is measured by comparing diet costs to available income and four affordability metrics for each level of diet quality are calculated. The first three of these define the income available for food as 52 percent of total household expenditure, computed from budget shares recorded in low-income countries and used for The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World (SOFI) 2022 report. The fourth metric uses actual food expenditure. The metrics available are:
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Contact us at FPN@worldbank.org, and follow #FoodPricesForNutrition on Twitter and LinkedIn