13 results match your criteria: "Institute of Market Analysis[Affiliation]"
Nat Food
January 2025
Department of Food and Resource Economics, University of Copenhagen, Copenhangen, Denmark.
Fiscal policies can provide important incentives for encouraging the dietary changes needed to achieve global policy targets. Across Europe, the foods relevant to health and the environment often incur reduced but non-zero value-added tax (VAT) rates at about half the maximum rates, which allows for providing both incentives and disincentives. Integrating economic, health and environmental modelling, we show that reforming VAT rates on foods, including increasing rates on meat and dairy, and reducing VAT rates on fruits and vegetables can improve diets and result in health, environmental and economic benefits in most European countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag Res
September 2024
College of Economics and Management, Northwest A&F University, Yangling, P.R. China.
International literature is lacking quantified information about the impact of raising demands for attractive appearances and the private standards on food loss and associated effects on the economy, the environment and social issues. Given the global scale and significance to food consumption and health, fresh apples were selected for researching the issues. By focusing on China, the major production region of fresh apple in the world where the effects of aesthetic preference and shape abnormality are substantial, the present study aims to gain insights into the on-farm grading processes and different marketing channels for fresh apples in China.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMeat Sci
November 2024
Department of Animal Sciences, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA. Electronic address:
Nat Food
October 2023
Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute, Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry and Fisheries, Institute of Market Analysis, Braunschweig, Germany.
Food trade is generally perceived to increase the availability and diversity of foods available to consumers, but there is little empirical evidence on its implications for human health. Here we show that a substantial proportion of dietary risks and diet-related mortality worldwide is attributable to international food trade and that whether the contributions of food trade are positive or negative depends on the types of food traded. Using bilateral trade data for 2019 and food-specific risk-disease relationships, we estimate that imports of fruits, vegetables, legumes and nuts improved dietary risks in the importing countries and were associated with a reduction in mortality from non-communicable diseases of ~1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag
October 2023
Thünen Institute of Market Analysis, Bundesallee 63, Braunschweig, 38116, Germany. Electronic address:
Food loss and waste burdens the food system with an unnecessary use of natural resources such as soil, land and water as well as with the avoidable generation of further climate-relevant emissions. These negative externalities may provide a rationale for public sector intervention where feasible and efficient. Semi-structured interviews with 22 experts (farmers, producer organisations and retailers) in Germany and a questionnaire survey with 215 suppliers of a retailing company from Germany, Spain and Italy were conducted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Food
August 2023
Department of Agroecology, iClimate, Center for Circular Bioeconomy (CBIO), Aarhus University, Tjele, Denmark.
Nat Food
June 2023
Environmental Change Institute, Oxford University Centre for the Environment, Oxford, UK.
Foods
May 2023
Thünen Institute of Market Analysis, Bundesallee 63, 38116 Braunschweig, Germany.
With the aim of disclosing the antecedents and dynamics of food loss generation in the upstream stages of the fruit and vegetable sector, this paper presents the results of a series of semi-structured interviews with 10 Producers' Organisations (POs) in Germany and Italy. The content of the interviews is analysed by applying a qualitative content analysis approach, thus disclosing the most relevant issues affecting food loss generation at the interface between POs and buyers (industry and retailers). Several similarities emerge as we compare the answers provided by Italian and German POs, especially concerning the role of retailers' cosmetic specification on products in the generation of losses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSustain Sci
January 2022
Chair for Urban Climate Resilience, Center for Climate Resilience, University of Augsburg, 86156 Augsburg, Germany.
Unlabelled: Food loss and waste are associated with an unnecessary consumption of natural resources and avoidable greenhouse gas emissions. The United Nations have thus set the reduction of food loss and waste on the political agenda by means of the Sustainable Development Goal Target 12.3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2022
Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Food and Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Old Road Campus Headington, Oxford, OX3 7LF, UK.
Agricultural subsidies are an important factor for influencing food production and therefore part of a food system that is seen as neither healthy nor sustainable. Here we analyse options for reforming agricultural subsidies in line with health and climate-change objectives on one side, and economic objectives on the other. Using an integrated modelling framework including economic, environmental, and health assessments, we find that on a global scale several reform options could lead to reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and improvements in population health without reductions in economic welfare.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Food
July 2021
Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
The United Kingdom's food system will be greatly impacted by Brexit-related trade deals and policy developments-with implications for dietary risk factors and public health. Here we use an integrated economic-health modelling framework to analyse the impacts of different policy approaches to Brexit. A 'soft Brexit' that is in line with the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement increases diet-related mortality in the United Kingdom as costs for health-promoting and import-dependent foods increase and their consumption decreases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2021
UMR SAS, INRAE, INSTITUT AGRO AGROCAMPUS OUEST, 35000 Rennes, France.
Appetite
June 2017
Department of Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1, Canada. Electronic address:
In the aftermath of food scandals, household perceptions about the health risks posed by failures in food safety play a central role in determining their mitigating behavior. A stream of literature has shown that factors including media coverage of a scandal, risk perceptions, trust in food safety information, and consumption habits matter. This paper deviates from the standard assumption of a homogeneous response to media information across all households exposed to a food scandal.
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