Factors Affecting Demand for Food Text extracted from The World Food Problem Leathers & Foster, 2004 http://www.lastfirst.net/images/product/R004548.jpg
Age Structure Population Pyramids indicate age structure Developing countries have much higher percentage of young people Developed countries have even distribution of age groups
Momentum Changes in age structure affect population for decades Example: Baby Boom If a developing country achieves replacement fertility rates for adults Population growth continues for decades Because there are more children Baby boom age pyramid
Dependency Ratios Ratio of dependents to working adults Burden of dependent children per adult greater in developing country Developed nation ex: 0.21 children/adult Developing nation ex: .77 chlidren/adult
Age Structure determines future calorie needs Calorie needs are different at different ages Age structure allows prediction of future calorie needs as current population grows up Need for food can grow faster than the population if more adults than children Adults require more food
Other factors affecting future food needs Number of Pregnant women Amount of physical activity Height of population indicates nutrition level Population + demand/person + more meat Huge synergistic effect Sierra Leone 8 yr old
More Meat As incomes rise, people eat more meat, less cereals Meat production requires plant calories Average 6:1 conversion ratio Developing countries eat 4,224 Calories from plants 2,255 directly from plants Plus 315 meat calories (12.5%) Requires 1,969 plant calories to produce meat
More Meat If people in developing countries ate 15% meat Would increase total plant calories required to 4,591/person Equivalent increase in demand to 8.7% increase in population
More Meat If people in developing nations ate amount of meat eaten in developed nations (27% calories) Would require 6,200 plant-derived calories 47% increase
Optimistic Future Scenario: Next 50 yrs Per capita income increases Population growth of 50% Fertility declines Food supplies keep pace with demand Life expectancy increases Average height increases Age structure changes toward fewer children Food demand grows by 101% Morocco: middle income country
Same impact if pessimistic future Self-Correction on impact with lower quality of life: If prosperity declines Food supply doesn’t keep up with demand Population grows more rapidly Less decline in fertility rates But need less food because Age structure: more children Average height: less change Calories per capita low Dietary diversification small Impact: 98% growth in food demand Sierra Leone