Next Article in Journal
Chitosan Nanogel with Mixed Food Plants and Its Relation to Blood Glucose in Type 2 Diabetes: A Systematic and Meta-Analysis Review of Observational Studies
Previous Article in Journal
Early Life Low-Calorie Sweetener Consumption Impacts Energy Balance during Adulthood
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

The Income Elasticities of Food, Calories, and Nutrients in China: A Meta-Analysis

1
Agricultural Information Institute of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100081, China
2
College of Economics and Management, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100083, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
These authors contributed equally to this work.
Nutrients 2022, 14(22), 4711; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14224711
Submission received: 25 September 2022 / Revised: 25 October 2022 / Accepted: 1 November 2022 / Published: 8 November 2022
(This article belongs to the Section Nutrition and Public Health)

Abstract

:
Estimating food- and nutrient-income elasticities is important for making food and nutrition policies to combat malnutrition. There are many studies that have estimated the relationship between income growth and food/nutrient demand in China, but the results are highly heterogeneous. We conducted a meta-analysis in China to systematically review the elasticity of food, calories, and other nutrients to income. We considered a meta-sample using a collection of 64 primary studies covering 1537 food-income elasticities, 153 nutrient-income elasticities, and 147 calorie-income elasticity estimates. There are significant differences in the size of the income elasticities across food and nutrient groups. We found that food- and calorie-income elasticity appear to decline as per capita income increases, except for vitamin and aquatic products. We also found a publication bias for food and calories, and in particular, the study attributes may be important, as they can influence estimates. Given the limited study on nutrient-income elasticity, understanding the impact of income changes on nutrient intake is an important direction worthy of further research.

1. Introduction

Ending poor diets and malnutrition in all its forms is a goal that is intrinsically linked with some of the world’s most pressing challenges. The most recent data show that an unacceptably large number of people are still affected by malnutrition. Globally, of all children under five years of age, one in five is stunted (149.2 million), 45.4 million (6.7%) are wasted, and 38.9 million (5.7%) are overweight [1]. Nutritional burdens trigger some chronic non-communicable diseases and cause enormous health and economic loss in society. Poor diet is the main contributor to nutritional burdens. It is estimated that nearly 690 million people suffer from chronic malnutrition, 3 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet, and 11 million die each year from low-quality diets worldwide [2]. Given the consequences of poor diets, it is particularly important to design evidence-based policies to encourage a healthy diet. Studying people’s food and nutrient demand is essential for policymaking because it explains how economic and policy changes influence people’s demand for food and nutrients.
The coexistence of malnutrition and “hidden hunger” is a common challenge for many emerging economies, including China [3,4]. As the largest developing country, China’s population accounts for about one-fifth of the world [5]. Following the rapid economic growth, the per capita disposable income of Chinese residents saw an average annual growth of 7.2%, in real terms, after adjusting for inflation, from 2011 to 2020. Meanwhile, China’s food consumption pattern has changed from supply-constrained to nutrition-oriented [6]. According to official statistics, China’s share of undernourished people has declined substantially (from 10.6% in 2000–2002 to below 2.5% in 2017–2019) [7]. Yet, there are at least 250 million “hidden hungry (hidden hunger refers to the hunger symptoms of hidden nutritional needs caused by the body’s nutritional imbalance or lack of certain vitamins and essential minerals)” people in China [1], which is characterized by micronutrient deficiency, which is a cause for concern. At the same time, China now finds itself among the nations greatly affected by the growing population of overweight or obese individuals, with an estimated one in six Chinese adults falling into these BMI classifications and childhood and adolescent obesity rates rising over the past several decades [8]. About 70% of chronic non-communicable diseases are linked to hidden hunger and malnutrition [7]. Particularly, the mortality of chronic non-communicable diseases accounted for 85% of all deaths in 2021 and has become a serious concern in China, according to the Report on Chinese Residents’ Chronic Diseases and Nutrition [9]. Given the consequences of poor diet, the size of China’s population, and the rapid growth of per capita income, it is important to study the heterogeneity of Chinese food and nutrient demand with changes in income, providing an evidential basis for designing policies to improve nutrition.
Generally, food demand is income inelastic (elasticities are less than one), reflecting Engel’s law that food budget shares decline when income rises [10]. (Income elasticities of food demand are economic measurements of the responsiveness of food consumption to income for a group of consumers. The income elasticity of food demand measures the percent change in the consumption of total food or a certain food item or group of food items to a percent change in the real income of consumers [11]). However, a series of articles emerged, casting doubt on the role of income. The role of income continues to be interesting, since contrasting results appear throughout the literature [12,13,14]. The food demand–income elasticities estimated in the literature in China showed heterogeneous results. The food demand–income elasticities estimated in the literature ranged from −1.3 to 2.3 (see Figure 1). The income elasticity for staple food reached over 1.0 in a rural study by Han et al. [15]. and Hovhannisyan et al. [16] found that for urban people, the income elasticity for staple food was close to 0, and Carter and Zhong [17] found a negative value. Most studies estimated income elasticities for meat are higher than 0, and some found greater than 1 [6,18,19]. The income elasticities of calories range from −0.4 to 0.9 (see Figure 2). Several authors, such as Liu and Hu [20], Tian [21], and Zhang [22], reported a strong relationship between the level of per capita expenditure and calorie intake. In contrast, Nie and Poza [23] and Chen [24] found that the relationship between household income and calorie intake is not significantly different from zero. Tian and Yu [25] found a nonlinear relationship between nutrition indices and income growth. Households with moderate or higher macronutrient intake tend to decrease their macronutrient intake—especially fat—in rural areas, while in urban areas, the least nourished tend to consume more carbohydrates and proteins [26]. The results are divergent due to different samples, study regions, methods, and other factors.
This study emphasizes the heterogeneity of food-, calorie- and nutrient-income elasticities in China through a meta-analysis approach and builds on previous studies in three ways. First, we analyze a comprehensive set of food and nutrient products at a disaggregate level. Most quantitative reviews of food demand elasticities focused only on calories [27,28] or only on food [4,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38]. Most of these previous meta-analyses focused on a small number of products or products at a more aggregate level than our study. Second, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first review in China that examines the estimates for income elasticity of food, calorie, and nutrients on a comparative basis. Only three meta-analysis studies of food/nutrient demand were published for China: two are on food products [32,39], the other is on calories [29], and none tackles nutrients. The previous meta-analyses of food and nutrient demand exist for other countries or across countries [11,38,40] but not for China, a country with the largest population experiencing a nutrition transition.
Third, we consider a comprehensive set of potential factors affecting changes in income elasticity, which is linked to the attributes of primary studies. This study updates the estimates of food- and nutrients–income elasticities in China by a systematic approach and provides evidence that may help design food policies in China.
The rest of the paper is structured as follows: Section 2 introduces the data and methods used on income elasticities for food, calorie, and nutrients in China; Section 3 elaborates on the key descriptive statistics of the meta-sample; Section 4 presents an overview of the meta-analysis and model specification estimated in this paper; and Section 5 reports the results, while the discussion section concludes.

2. Description of Data

2.1. Selection of Primary Studies and Construction of Meta-Sampler

The analysis started with a literature review retrieval to collect food- and nutrient-income elasticities from relevant primary studies. To locate candidate studies, we conducted the initial search across various online databases, including both published literature (journal articles) and “gray” literature (working papers/reports), using the keywords of “China,” “food,” “calorie,” “nutrient,” “demand,” “consumption,” and “income elasticity.” The databases searched were the following: Google, Google Scholar, Web of Science, EconLit, Scopus, the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), FAO, and the World Bank. In addition, we conducted an exhaustive search in the references of review studies of China’s food/nutrient demand e.g., [12,32,37,38,39], and we identified 13 new records.
We based the selection of food-income elasticities on the following criteria. First, after reading and retrieving articles based on the relevance of the abstract to the research objectives, we excluded review articles and repeated literature. This process eventually yielded 898 comparable studies using China data. Second, the primary criteria used in selecting studies for the current analysis was the presence of standard errors or t-values for the computed elasticities, and articles did not fulfill this criterion were excluded, reducing the number of articles to 297. Third, to avoid problems of comparability between income-elasticity estimates, we only maintained studies providing unit-free elasticity estimates of food demand concerning income, further reducing the final sample to 71 studies. Fourth, in the case of multiple model estimates for the same dataset, we included only the authors’ recommended model if our determinants do not capture model differences. Finally, we deleted additional observations with food-, calorie-, and nutrient-income elasticities exceeding five standard deviations outside the means to avoid extreme values, resulting in the removal of 7 observations (see Appendix A for a complete presentation of the data and sources). Our final dataset consisted of 64 articles that matched our objective. The study employed primary interest data comprising the dependent variables (meta variables) (income elasticities for food, calories, and nutrients). The resulting samples without outliers provided 1537 food-income elasticity estimates, 153 nutrient-income elasticity estimates, and 147 calorie-income elasticity estimates (where a study produced multiple income elasticities (e.g., for different food/nutrient groups, for urban and rural samples separately, using different estimation models), all estimates were included in the meta-sample, resulting in a total of 147–1537 elasticities) (see Figure 3).

2.2. Descriptive Analysis

The explanatory factors can be divided into two categories—contextual and methodological factors—to explain the heterogeneity in income elasticity estimates [41]. The contextual difference may be generated by food or nutrient categories, locations studied, and time periods. (Some meta-analyses use the time period of the research data as an explanatory variable. The reason why we ‘do not use this variable is that it is highly correlated with the explanatory variables in our model (especially the logarithm of per capita income).) Methodological factors may include study design and budgeting, demand models, estimation procedures, and peer-review [36].
Table 1 summarizes the main characteristics of three categories of research samples: food-, calorie-, and nutrient-income elasticities. Table 1 presents the definition of the variables included in this research. Among the three types of research samples, the number of foodstuffs accounted for about 84% of the observations; the number of elasticities attributed to nutrients and calorie contributions was less observed, at about 8% each. Overall, the mean of the income elasticities was highest for food (0.690), with a standard deviation of 0.685, which was followed by nutrients (0.298), with a standard deviation of 0.315, and calories (0.212), with a standard deviation of 0.225. These statistics indicate large variations in income-elasticity estimates for food, calories, and nutrients warrant further investigation.

2.2.1. Product Differences

The income elasticities vary across different types of food and nutrients. The results show considerable differences across previous studies. The food demand income elasticities estimated in the literature ranged from −1.30 to 2.30 (see Figure 1). The main food grouping in this research is the staple food, vegetables and fruit, meat, oil and fat, aquatic products, dairy products, eggs, and other foods (in general, “staple food” is defined as all cereals, wheat, rice, and coarse grains, and “meat” is defined as all meats (including pork, beef, mutton, and poultry)). In theory, the income elasticity for a food group should be a weighted average of products’ income elasticities, as the collected elasticities are taken from different studies at different times and places. The product classifications are consistent with those in the rural and urban household surveys conducted annually by the National Bureau of Statistics of China (NBSC). (Along with the degree of substitution, that is, foods of the same category should have greater substitutability than those of different categories. The “tubers, starch” are summarized as “staple food”, and “sugar and beverages” is merged into “other food” to facilitate meta-regression analysis, with the limited amount of starch, tubers, sugar, and beverages observed in the primary studies.) Food items that make up basic diets, such as staple food, oil, and fruits and vegetables, have lower income elasticities, with a mean elasticity lower than 0.5. However, elasticities are considerably higher for foods sourced from animals. Food groups with higher elasticities would typically supplement basic diet requirements in China (i.e., aquatic products and dairy products) [42], with elasticities ranging between 1.066 and 1.084.
The income elasticities of calories are −0.40 to 0.90, and nutrients are 0.06 to 1.20 (see Figure 2). The mean nutrient elasticities are high, especially for vitamins and fats (Table 1). Nutrients are divided into macronutrients (protein and fat) and micronutrients (vitamins and minerals). The mean elasticity is the lowest for calories (0.212), which is reasonable given that the Chinese have fulfilled the first-order caloric needs [25]. Foods of lower nutritional value and lower-quality diets generally cost less per calorie and tended to be selected by groups of lower socioeconomic status [10]. Conversely, vitamins, protein, and fat-based products are supplementary to the diets of most Chinese households and are seen as high-priced products. The meta-analysis includes dummy variables to control the difference among food/nutrient groups.

2.2.2. Region-Level Differences

Relatively large differences appear in the magnitude of the income elasticities among regions in China. Data for rural food (0.755) and calorie (0.242) demand indicate that the mean value of income elasticity is larger than urban values (0.560, 0.144). The income elasticity of other nutrients for rural food is lower than for urban. As households meet their first-order caloric needs, they move from cheap calorie-dense staples to more expensive nutrient-dense foods [43]. The reasons for this phenomenon are divided into two aspects. First, urban households have access to a wider variety of food products, and in contrast, rural households have fewer varieties of food because their diets are dominated by households produce, and the local food markets are also underdeveloped [18]. Second, physical activity in urban households is relatively lower than the rural; thus, rural people rely on more calorie requirements, leading to diets comprising more calorie-dense foods [44]. We include a dummy variable for rural data to distinguish between urban and rural areas.

2.2.3. Other Data Differences

To control the difference in data, we set up three dummy variables: (1) how the “income” (total household expenditure or total household income) is measured; (2) whether the data are micro-level survey data or macro summary data; and (3) whether the data are panel data, cross-section, or time-series data.
The primary studies include different definitions of “income” elasticity. The definition of “income” elasticity is the number of demand changes concerning changes in total income (income elasticity) or total household expenditure (expenditure elasticity). (We assume that total household income equals total household expenditures in the long run. However, in the short term, income and expenditure will vary due to savings and borrowing.) There appear to be differences between these two types of studies. For the sake of simplicity, we do not distinguish between income elasticity and total-expenditure elasticity here, while we control for this difference using a dummy variable [41]. In addition, we exclude conditional elasticities calculated by a food-demand model with a function of total food expenditure, or specific food category expenditure, because food expenditure is a family decision variable. If the studies treat total food expenditure or specific food category expenditure as exogenous, concerns arise regarding endogeneity bias [45]. Our sample includes 922 estimated food–income elasticities, and the rest (615 estimates) are total expenditure elasticities. Meanwhile, observations (119) and (113) for calorie/nutrient are total income elasticities, and the rest are expenditure elasticities. The results in Table 1 show that the mean income elasticity of food and nutrients is lower than expenditure elasticity.
Data differences may also lead to systematic differences in elasticity values [12]. Household survey data are generally considered superior to aggregate data; survey data are more consistent with demand theory and may include demographic characteristics, making it possible to examine the heterogeneity of different household preferences [46]. Furthermore, panel data are generally considered superior to cross-sectional data in controlling for unobserved heterogeneity in consumer choice [38,47]. The mean elasticities using panel data are lower than those using other data types (Table 1); thus, we control this data difference analysis using a dummy variable.

2.2.4. Per Capita Income

Low income impacts the quantity and composition of food demand. According to Engel’s Law, as income increases, the proportion of income spent on food decreases. Low-income groups spend nearly half of their budget on food, while high-income groups allocate a small proportion of their income to food. Therefore, low-income groups are more responsive to food prices and income volatility, especially for high-value products [48]. To control for income effects in our meta-analysis, we include the logarithm of per capita income. (If per capita income is reported in the sample literature, we include it. If no income or total expenditure values are reported, we use per capita income values with region in the study year from the National Bureau of Statistics of China to represent it. For studies using panel and time-series data, we take the average of these incomes for the period of the data in the underlying study.)
In addition, Bennett’s Law states that as incomes rise, families change the allocation of their food budgets from starchy staples, cheap sources of calories, to more expensive foods, such as nutrient-rich fruits and animal products. Shifting consumption toward more diversified foods leads to greater nutrient content [49]. Changes in dietary behavior as a function of income may be captured by nonlinear specifications of household food products and nutrient demand functions [23]. The interaction term between the logarithm of per capita income and the different food (or nutrients) is included to explore possible differences.

2.2.5. Modeling and Estimation Differences

We include dummy variables to control four types of models and estimate differences, which are as follows: (1) the type of budget process (multi-stage or single-stage); (2) the type of demand system in the sample study (or only a single equation); (3) whether the demand model is a three-rank Quadratic Almost Ideal Demand System (indicating that the Engel curve in the demand system is nonlinear); and (4) the type of the estimation program in the primary study.
Multi-stage budgeting refers to the sequential allocation of the consumer’s total spending. For example, in a two-stage budgeting model, the consumer decides on the total expenditure of food to be spent in the first stage and then decides on the amount of individual food in the second stage. Multi-stage budgeting requires a weakly separable utility function of consumers among groups of goods [50]; the restriction may affect the estimated value. As seen from Table 1, most studies used single-stage budgeting, and the mean income elasticity of food is 0.721, higher than the mean income elasticity of multi-stage studies (0.540). In contrast, the average value of multi-stage nutrient elasticity was higher than that of a single-stage budget.
Lewbel [51] classifies them among demand systems according to their rank. Demand systems applied nowadays usually have a rank of two or greater to better reflect consumers’ food consumption preference and explain food consumption in responses from different income groups. As Table 1 indicates, most of the meta-samples are two-rank models. For food consumption, the mean elasticity value of the three-rank model is higher than that of the two-rank model. The lack of sample size does not allow comparing the mean value of nutrient elasticity.
Different estimation procedures may have a connection with the estimated elasticities. The Least Squares (LS) is the most popular method, which is used in nearly half of our meta-sample, followed by the method of Quasi-Unrelated Regression (SUR). Other commonly used estimation methods include Maximum Likelihood Estimation (MLE), panel data estimation, and instrumental variables. Among the estimation methods, the mean elastic value estimated by the LS method is lower than that estimated by other methods.

2.2.6. Publication Bias

Publication bias is the phenomenon of easy publication of studies with compelling empirical results of a particular magnitude or statistical significance. Such bias may be caused by several factors, including a tendency for authors, reviewers, and editors to avoid reporting and publishing small and insignificant estimates for statistically significant results. The quality of data and research may also vary among the publication types. The attributes considered include the type of publication used (i.e., published in journals/international organization reports/conference reports/working papers, etc.) and the language of the publication (i.e., published in Chinese/English).

3. Method

Meta-analysis is the quantitative alternative to qualitative reviews of the empirical literature [52]. It is useful in identifying study-specific characteristics that may influence the reported results. There are three main procedures for applying meta-analysis: (i) Funnel Asymmetry Testing (FAT) to test whether publication selection bias influences the sample of estimates; (ii) Precision Effect Testing (PET) to test for a genuine non-zero effect of estimates once the publication bias is accommodated and corrected; and (iii) meta-regression analysis (MRA) to investigate whether study characteristics affected the size of the demand–income relation for food and nutrients.

3.1. Funnel Asymmetry Test (FAT) and Precision Effect Test (PET)

Meta-analysis is useful for identifying publication bias and estimating genuine empirical effects beyond publication bias in the effect size. Publication bias may overweigh the real estimated elasticities in the literature, causing the skewed distribution of reported effect size [52,53]. Therefore, it is crucial to identify whether the literature on a given topic suffers from publication selection bias and, if it does, how such bias should be corrected.
A common approach to test the existence of publication bias in the economics literature is the FAT approach [54], which can be specified as follows:
  e f f e c t i j = α + β 1 S E i j + μ i j                                        
where e f f e c t i j is the standard effect size from the primary studies, such as the reported elasticity coefficient (i.e., the income elasticity of food/calorie/nutrition) in the primary studies, i denotes the elasticity estimate for the j -th study. S E i j is the standard error in primary studies (in the absence of an estimated standard error, the inverse of the square root of the sample size or the inverse of the square root of the degree of freedom can also be used as a measure of estimation [55]), and   β 1   is statistically significant when the study effect size ( e f f e c t i j ) is more likely to correlate with its standard error ( S E i j ). It means publication bias varies with standard error ( S E i j ); large numbers of studies with lower S E values are associated with the significance of β 1 , suggesting publication bias.
Stanley [56] proposed a genuine empirical effect beyond the publication bias. Stantely [56,57] suggested applying PET. Based on Equation (1), we consider two sets of covariates: X k is the vector of covariates that explains the heterogeneity associated with estimated elasticity and publication bias; Z m is the vector of covariates to capture the heterogeneity related to the tendency to published estimates. β 0 , β 1 , π k , δ m are estimated parameters, and μ i j denotes the error term in the regression. The sign and significance of β 0 identify the empirical effect under review of the meta-analysis.
e f f e c t i j = β 0 + β 1 S E i j + k = 1 K π k X k , i j + m = 1 M δ m Z m , i j + μ i j  
A common problem for the above equation is embedded heteroscedasticity due to the specification of the equation; estimates with small variance are more reliable than those with high variance. Therefore, Equation (2) cannot be estimated directly by the OLS method. Stanley [56] suggests using the inverse of the standard error to correct for heteroscedasticity. Thus, Equation (3) can be re-written as follows:
t i j = β 0 ( 1 S E i j ) + k = 1 K π k ( X k , i j / S E i j ) + β 1 + m = 1 M δ m Z m , i j + μ i j
Equation (3) allows us to conduct an FAT to test whether publication selection bias influences the sample of estimates. The larger the deviation between β 1 and 0 ( β 1 0 ), the greater the asymmetry of the effect size reported in the primary studies, thus suggesting publication bias. Equation (3) can also ascertain the genuine empirical effect beyond publication bias through the PET. The β 0 (empirical effect) implies the significance of income on elasticity. If β 0 is statistically significant, we conclude that the impact of income on elasticity is statistically different from 0 in the reviewed studies.

3.2. The MRA: Identify Sources of Heterogeneity

The MRA examines the sources of heterogeneity in the population effect size. A typical multivariate MRA is given by the following:
E i j = α + k = 1 K β k X k , i j + μ i j ;   μ i j ~ N   ( 0 ,   σ μ )
where E i j is the i -th elasticity of the j -th study (including food, calorie, and nutrients), X k represents the vector of the determined study attribute, and α ,   μ i j , and β k are the estimated parameters. The signs of the reported coefficients ( β k ) indicate how a given variable influences changes in the food/nutrient–income elasticity. Thus, a positive sign indicates that the variable positively affects elasticity, and a negative sign implies the opposite effect. The econometric procedure applied to identify the heterogeneity, particularly to reduce publication bias in MRA, is the weighted average of measures using effect size precision (for example, the inverse of the variance of the standard error of the estimated effect size). The standard error in estimating effect size is discounted for small sample studies. Given this, we adopt the method Stanley [55] suggested to estimate Equation (3)’s parameters. This method is a weighted least square model that reduces publication bias in the MRA by using the reciprocal of the square root of the standard error for estimating the weight of the major studies. The variance of each estimate is used as the weight to minimize the variance of the weighted average result.
In light of differences in the primary studies, this article analyzes study characteristics to uncover factors affecting the estimated income elasticities of food, calories, and nutrients. As for the nature of estimate elasticities examined in the primary studies, we grouped three major categories: food-, calorie- and nutrient-income elasticity (the relationship between demand for fats, proteins, minerals, and income) as dependent variables in a series of meta-analyses. The independent variables were stratified based on five dimensions: demand specification, nature of data, estimation technique, published features, and study area. The variables adopted in our study are listed and described in Table 2.

4. Results

4.1. MST-MRA Results

The initial step for meta-analysis is the FAT and PET, which are obtained through Equation (2). The results presented in Table 3 show that all the coefficients, except nutrient, are statistically different from zero, suggesting that publication bias is only investigated in the food and calorie elasticities used in the analysis. A negative bias occurs in food-income elasticity ( β 1 = 31.39 , p < 0.001), indicating that the effect of income on food demand is negatively skewed. In addition, a negative coefficient of S E i j indicates that positive estimates of food–income elasticities appear to be under-reported in the sampled studies. Calorie shows a positive bias ( β 1 = 46.62 , p < 0.001), indicating the calorie elasticity value favors the positive estimated effect size. In such cases, authors do not report all the results they uncover. Instead, they select results consistent with prior findings or results they believe have a better chance of publication. β 0 reflects the genuine underlying empirical effect after correcting for any publication selection bias. This coefficient is also positive and statistically significant, indicating income’s positive and statistically significant effect on calorie and nutrient intake from the reviewed studies. The Z-variables in Table 3 represent the probability of journal editors’ acceptance of articles for publication. Regarding food elasticity research, the coefficients of journal variable and panel data are positive and significantly different from 0, indicating that articles published in journals and studies using panel data are more likely to exhibit publication bias. Research on calories using micro-survey data is less likely to have publication bias, and single-stage budgeting methods are more prone to publication bias.

4.2. Meta-Regression Analyses of Food-Income Elasticities

Table 4 presents the results for all foodstuffs, pooled using Equation (4), and estimated by weighted least squares (WLS) and OLS. Both are similar in the signs and significance levels of the estimated coefficient, indicating that our results are robust. The adjusted R2 estimated by WLS is higher than the result of OLS because the WLS was used to reduce the weight of outliers and improve the fitting degree of the model; this is consistent with the assumption that heteroscedasticity exists in the linear meta-regression.
The results show that studies focusing on rural populations estimated significantly higher income elasticities than those for urban or national (rural and urban jointly) populations. This is in line with our expected assumption that urban residents have access to more varieties of foodstuffs. Furthermore, our results on the effect of data attributes on the elasticity were significantly different from those used in primary studies, with lower food demand elasticities for panel data and micro-level survey data. Similar to other studies [27,29], the marginal effect for the total income dummy is negative for food (−0.166). This result may be related to the definition of total income/total expenditures; total income equals total expenditure plus net savings. If the saving rate increases, the estimated elasticities regarding total income may be lower than elasticities for total expenditure [30]. The estimated coefficient for the single-stage dummy is 0.761, indicating the baseline model with multi-rank significantly estimates higher elasticities than single rank.
There is a statistically significant relationship between food elasticities and the log of per capita income, staple food dummy, the aquatic dummy, and the interaction term of per capita income. It confirms differences in income elasticities according to the food group. Elasticities for meat and aquatic products are significantly higher than demand for other food groups; i.e., demand for these foods is most responsive to income changes. Demand for basic foods, such as staple food, is less elastic and thus less responsive to income changes. Concerning the country’s overall income level, our results show that a doubling of per capita income is predicted to lead to a decline of 0.19 in food–income elasticities (−0.27 ×   l n   ( 2 )   ≈ −0.19). This is consistent with the idea of a saturation point for food consumption and reducing the share of food expenditure as income increases [4]. For staple food, the total marginal effect, including the interaction term, is 0.322 0.270 = 0.592 , so a doubling of per capita income would lead to a decline of   l n ( 2 ) × 0.592     0.41 in the income elasticity for staple food. With the economic growth, people’s demand for staple foods will become less income-sensitive, indicating that Chinese has met energy needs from starchy staples [6]. For aquatic products, the product of significant public health concern in China, the corresponding increase in income elasticities for aquatic products is about 0.27. Optimizing the consumption structure of animal food and increasing the aquatic products may reduce the risk of heart disease and promote brain and eye health [58]. The increased cost of a healthy diet coincided with higher incomes, so more and more people may seek high-priced aquatic products.
The results show a negative, albeit statistically insignificant, coefficient for the variable representing articles published in journals. Additionally, most of the coefficients for the estimation methods (Model_type, Budget_stage) are not statistically significant. It seems that the estimation procedure and type do not influence much in terms of estimated income elasticities.

4.3. Meta-Regression Analyses of Calorie and Nutrient–Income Elasticities

Table 5 presents the results for the calorie and nutrient meta-regression. It explains how publication bias distorts the elasticities—peer-reviewed journals have significantly higher nutrient-income elasticities than working papers/reports. In addition, the marginal effect for Chinese publications is −1.546, which is statistically significant, indicating income elasticity for nutrients in Chinese-language publications is lower than those in English-language publications. The type of data used in primary studies confirms significant differences in nutrient- and calorie-income elasticities. The panel and time-series data appear to have significantly higher estimates for nutrients. However, the calorie–income elasticities of studies that employed panel time-series data were significantly lower in magnitude than those using cross-sectional data. Regarding the functional form of the demand model, the only statistically significant variable is using a demand system for nutrients. Compared with the pragmatic model, the estimated coefficient for the demand system dummy is −1.187, implying that the demand system model tends to yield lower income elasticities for nutrients. As for the multi-stage budgeting model, the only statistically significant result is positive for calories. This result can be related to the fact that a multi-stage budgeting assumption restricts consumption flexibility to adjust to income changes [39].
The nutrient–income elasticity estimated using total income is significantly smaller than the elasticity of total expenditure. There is a significantly negative relationship between income growth and calorie–income elasticity, while the magnitude of the decline in income elasticities is small (about 0.09 in response to a doubling of per capita income,   l n ( 2 ) × 0.121     0.09 ). For the income elasticity of nutrient products, the vitamins dummy and the interaction term between the log of per capita income and the vitamins dummy are statistically significant. The income elasticities for nutrients (as a whole), fat, and minerals do not change significantly with income growth. However, for vitamins, the total marginal effect, including the interaction term, is 0.169 0.0122 = 0.157 , so a doubling of per capita income would lead to an increase of l n ( 2 ) × 0.157     0.11 in the income elasticity for vitamins. It appears that the intake of vitamins will exhibit greater decreases in the face of economic downturns than other nutrients. In particular, results here suggest that as countries become richer, not only are calorie intakes response to income change on a gentle trajectory, but that the impact on nutrient intake is likely to be small.

5. Discussion and Conclusions

This study aims to better understand the relationship between income level and the demand for different foods, nutrients, and calories in China. This will help in understanding what domestic policies can be used in the fight against malnutrition. A significant contribution of the study is creating a database of food-income elasticities that can identify the factors underlying differences in estimates in China. A meta-sample of income elasticities for China was built, drawn from 64 primary studies, covering 1537 food-income elasticities for eight groups of food (Staple food, Vegetables and fruit, Meat, Oil and fat, Dairy, Aquatic products, Eggs, and Other food), 153 nutrient–income elasticities for three types of nutrients (fat, vitamin, and minerals), and 147 calorie–income elasticity estimates. The variables capturing a set of study-specific attributes identified important factors associated with the variation in primary studies to explain the heterogeneity across income elasticities.
On average, income elasticities in China are positive across all food categories. Thus, income is a potential key determinant of food demand. According to the meta-analysis results, elasticities for meat and aquatic products are significantly higher than demand for other food, while staple food is less elastic. Moreover, there is a significant negative relationship between income growth and the size of food–income elasticities, that is, the food–income elasticities decline with income growth. This relation also holds for staple food. One exception is the aquatic products; we find a positive relationship between income growth and the magnitude of income elasticity of aquatic products. A possible explanation is that the saturation point of staple food consumption has been reached due to increased incomes. Chinese people may shift consumption toward more diversified and often more expensive foods with higher nutrient content [59]. These results suggest that income growth may align with a beneficial shift in the nutritional status of diets to reduce the risk of heart and brain disease [58].
Concerning nutrients income elasticities, we found the mean income elasticity is higher for fat (0.324), vitamin (0.304), and protein (0.303) than for minerals (0.248) and calories (0.212). The impact of income on calorie and nutrient intake is likely to be small, as some studies have concluded [38,60]. Knowing how calorie and nutrient elasticities change with income becomes necessary in light of nutrition-related chronic diseases. There is a significantly negative relationship between income growth and calorie–income elasticity size, while the predicted decline is relatively small (0.09 in response to a doubling in per capita income). However, given that China’s per capita income is growing by 7.2%, the results suggest that the sensitivity of caloric demand to income will be constant though incomes rising. Thus, for countries that are already consuming well beyond the recommended calorie levels, further increases in income will lead to an even larger consumption of calories. Thus, policy-makers still should primarily focus on the alleviation of weight-related problems, with one in six Chinese adults falling into obesity [6,8]. As for nutrients, only the income elasticity for vitamins may have a gentle increase with income growth, while the impact on other nutrients is not significant. The effect of nutrients on the chronic disease has also been documented. Vitamin D supplementation has been associated with reduced mortality. Zinc deficiency has caused children growth retardation. Vitamin A, Vitamin E and total antioxidant capacity supplementation have had a protective effect on metabolic syndrome [61]. Regarding the steadily increasing incidence of nutrition-related chronic diseases [1], economic growth accompanied by nutrition transition patterns tends to evoke health problems. Some studies suggest that good nutrition is a driver of economic growth. Therefore, development policies should be geared specifically toward reducing chronic malnutrition to spur economic growth rather than focusing on economic growth to spur good nutrition [62,63]. Policy-makers should continue to monitor the evolution of demand for these nutrients to ensure people’s health, particularly given the sheer size of the population and the relatively tight nutrition situation in China.
Our results prove the relationships between regions and food-, calorie-, and nutrient-income elasticity. Regarding food, we found that rural people are more sensitive to income and price change, which is consistent with earlier findings in the literature [63,64]. We did not find significant effects of urban and rural differences concerning calories and nutrients.
As for the role of data and methodology, we found that the food elasticity is higher when the primary studies substitute household expenditures for income, similar to [29]. In addition, we found publication bias in studies on food and calorie elasticities; the elasticity values reported in journals were lower than those in reports or working papers, which is in line with the previous studies [27,28]. Specifically, we found that income elasticity for nutrients in Chinese-language publications tends to be lower than in English-language publications.
Overall, the results suggest that development strategies to improve economic growth may improve diet quality but may be insufficient to improve nutrient intake. This study’s findings also suggest that heterogeneity in food-, calories-, and nutrients-income demand elasticities in China are mainly due to contextual characteristics and methodological factors. Notably, we also find publication bias. It is crucial to be aware of these causes of heterogeneity and provide reliable income elasticity estimates to improve food demand projections and design effective food and nutrition policies in China. This study’s main limitation is that the number of examined articles may be insufficient; only a few studies investigate nutrient–income elasticity in China, much less than food demand. Due to the nature of our study, relying on a more extensive study set does not seem feasible for the current meta-analysis. Understanding the impact of income changes on nutrient intake is still an important direction worthy of further research.

Author Contributions

J.Z. and J.H. are joint first authors, they made equal contribution on this study. Conceptualization, J.Z., J.H. and F.N.; methodology J.Z. and J.H.; software, J.Z.; validation, J.H., J.Z. and F.N.; formal analysis, J.H. and J.Z.; investigation, J.H. and J.Z.; resources, J.H.; data curation, J.Z. and J.H.; writing—original draft preparation, J.Z. and J.H.; writing—review and editing, J.H. and J.Z.; visualization, J.Z.; supervision, J.H.; project administration, J.H. and J.Z.; funding acquisition, J.H. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, grant number 72203216 and 71861147003.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The dataset used during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

Table A1. List of Primary Studies.
Table A1. List of Primary Studies.
AuthorJournalTimeTitleAreaElasticity Value
Su ChangMaster’s thesis,2010Effects of Economic Factors on Dietary Structure and Nutritional Status of Adult Residents in China—A Case Study of Nine Provinces (1991–2006)Urbanstaple food −0.046 oil and fat 0.015 meat 0.328 aquatic products 0.483 eggs 0.056
Yu Wen, Xu Shiwei, Zhang Yumei, Li Zhiqiang, Li ZheminChinese food and nutrition2012Study on food consumption and nutritional needs of rural households in China—based on cross-sectional data analysis of rural householdsRuralstaple food 1.000 vegetables and fruit 0.989 oil and fat 0.996 meat 0.987 other food 0.990 calorie 0.362 protein 0.336 fat 0.533 minerals 1.102
Zhang Yumei, Yu Wen, Li ZhiqiangJournal of Jiangxi Agricultural University2012Study on the elasticity of food consumption demand of rural residents in ChinaRuralstaple food 0.290 oil and fat 0.100 meat 1.810 aquatic products 2.010 eggs 0.540
Feng Zhiming, SteenfengResource science2006In the past 20 years, the changes of food consumption and the evaluation of dietary nutrition in ChinaNationstaple food −0.364 meat 0.985 aquatic products 0.863 eggs 1.062
Yu Wen, Xu Shiwei 2012Analysis of food consumption by rural residents in China in 2012Ruralstaple food 1.00 vegetables and fruit 0.089 oil and fat 0.996 meat 0.987 other food 0.990
Liu Weiwen, Ye Songqi, Liu ZhixiongChina market2015The characteristics and differences of food consumption structure of urban and rural residents-take Beijing as an exampleRuralstaple food 0.850 meat 0.267 eggs 0.285 other food 1.000
Li Huishan, Xu Shiwei, Kong FantaoConsumer economy2015A study on food consumption of urban residents in China based on income stratificationUrbanstaple food 0.017 oil and fat 0.270 meat 1.027 aquatic products 1.803 eggs 0.813 dairy products 2.033 other food 1.567
Sun Guofeng, Liu Weijin, Gao YanchunJournal of Huazhong Agricultural University (Social Science Edition)2002Empirical analysis of the food consumption structure of urban residents in Jiangsu ProvinceUrbanstaple food 0.329 oil and fat 0.343 meat 0.612 aquatic products 0.943 eggs 0.582 dairy products 1.574 other food 1.280
Chang Xiangyang, Li AipingJournal of Nanjing Agricultural University (Social Science Edition)2006Study on food consumption demand of rural residents in Jiangsu ProvinceRuralstaple food 0.072 vegetables and fruit 0.387 oil and fat 0.150 meat 0.536 aquatic products 0.855 other food 0.771
Li Xiaojun, Li NinghuiStatistical research2005Measurement and analysis of food consumption behavior of rural residents in the main food producing areaRuralstaple food 0.886 meat 1.058 aquatic products 0.879 eggs 0.760
Xiaoli Zuo, Zhang GuangshengJournal of Shenyang Agricultural University (Social Science Edition)2011Study on animal food consumption of urban and rural residents in Liaoning ProvinceUrbanmeat 1.004 aquatic products 1.003 eggs 1.168
Zhou JinchunChinese rural observation2006Study on the AIDS model of food consumption in rural residentsRuralstaple food 0.560 vegetables and fruit 1.804 oil and fat 0.219 meat 1.159 aquatic products 2.512 eggs 0.835 dairy products 2.190 other food 2.275
Huang JixuanChinese social sciences1999Social development, urbanization and food consumptionUrbanstaple food 0.497 vegetables and fruit 1.059 meat 0.651 aquatic products 1.460 other food 0.960
Cheng LichaoSouthern economy2009Intergenerational Differences in Food Consumption: An Empirical Study Based on China Health and Nutrition SurveyUrbanstaple food 0.029 vegetables and fruit 0.004 meat 0.053 eggs 0.030
Wang Zhigang, Xu QianjunQuantitative Economics, Technology and Economics Research2012Explore the transformation law of the food consumption structure of rural- the application of the LA/AIDS model embedded in the time path Ruralstaple food 0.416 meat 0.457 eggs 0.777 other food 0.123
Liu Xiumei, Qin FuAgricultural technology economy2005Study on animal food consumption of urban and rural residents in ChinaNationmeat 0.977 eggs 0.658
Huang Xintian, YifahaiConsumer economy1999Model analysis of the changing trend of the main food consumption structure of urban residents in ChinaUrbanstaple food 0.258 vegetables and fruit 0.520 meat 0.402 aquatic products 0.438 eggs 0.421
Xu Shiwei, Yu Wen, Wang WeiJournal of Nutrition2015Analysis of rural household food needs in rural ChinaRuralstaple food 1.000 vegetables and fruit 0.989 oil and fat 0.996 meat 0.987 other food 0.990
Yu Wen, Liu Hong, Wang Dongjie, Wang WeiChinese food and nutrition2012Study on the consumption of rations for Chinese residentsRuralstaple food −0.028
Li HaoMaster’s thesis, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences2007Study on food consumption and nutrition of poor residents in urban areas: an empirical analysis from six counties in Hunan ProvinceUrbanstaple food 0.102 vegetables and fruit 0.255 oil and fat 0.106 meat 0.104 aquatic products 0.149 eggs 0.143
Li AipingMaster’s thesis, Nanjing Agricultural University2007Study on food consumption of residents in rural Jiangsu ProvinceRuralstaple food 0.079 vegetables and fruit 0.372 oil and fat 0.185 meat 0.501 aquatic products 0.816 other food 0.530
Sun FeifeiMaster’s thesis, Nanjing Agricultural University2012Study on food consumption and nutrition of residents in rural Jiangsu ProvinceRuralstaple food 0.335 vegetables and fruit 0.307 oil and fat 0.228 meat 0.281 aquatic products 0.268 eggs 0.250 dairy products 0.140
Liang FanMaster’s thesis, Northwestern University of Agriculture, Forestry and Technology2014Analysis of changes in food expenditure and nutritional structure of urban residents in Shaanxi ProvinceUrbanstaple food 0.165 vegetables and fruit 0.822 oil and fat 0.177 meat 0.607 aquatic products 0.952 eggs 0.539 dairy products 1.172
Bi JieyingMaster’s thesis2010Study on food consumption among Chinese rural poorRuralstaple food 0.310 vegetables and fruit 0.760 oil and fat 0.820 meat 0.030 aquatic products 2.630 eggs 1.140 dairy products 2.560 other food 0.610
Zhang PinyingStatistics and decision-making2013A study on the heterogeneity of food demand of urban residents in China based on THEIDS modelUrbanstaple food 0.930 vegetables and fruit 1.141 meat 1.088 aquatic products 1.054 eggs 0.611 dairy products 0.921 other food 0.836
Wu Wei, Chen Yongfu, Yu Law SteadyChinese rural observation2012Analysis of food consumption behavior of urban residents in Guangdong Province based on the income stratification QUADDS modelUrbanstaple food 0.731 vegetables and fruit 0.992 oil and fat 1.026 meat 1.060 eggs 0.767 dairy products 1.454 other food 0.864
Zhang Mingyang, Zhang ChessConsumer economy2015Study on the transformation of the food consumption structure of rural residents—an application of the QUADS model that addresses expenditure constraints and embeds demographic characteristicsRuraloil and fat 1.086 meat 1.086 aquatic products 0.841 eggs 0.797
Chen Chao, Zhang MingyangNanjing Social Sciences2013Study on the impact of the implementation of gmed economy food policy on the change of food consumption structure of urban residentsUrbanstaple food 3.870 vegetables and fruit 0.790 oil and fat 1.790 meat 0.480 aquatic products 1.040 eggs 6.690 other food 2.400
Gao ShuaiDoctoral thesis 2013Food safety research for farmers in poor areasRuralstaple food −0.571 vegetables and fruit 2.973 oil and fat 3.920 meat 5.465 aquatic products 1.322 eggs 1.056
Huang Jiaxuan, Yin Fengying, Yu YanzhangConsumer economy2016Study on the food consumption demand of farmers in poor countiesRuralstaple food 0.847 vegetables and fruit 1.114 oil and fat 0.764 meat 1.623 aquatic products 1.365 eggs 1.192 dairy products 0.885
Zhang XuemeiMaster’s thesis2013Study on food consumption and nutrition of poor residents in rural China under the background of rising agricultural pricesRuralstaple food –0.040 vegetables and fruit 0.269 oil and fat 0.126 meat 0.345 aquatic products 0.447 dairy products 1.222 other food 0.381 calorie 0.026 protein 0.03 fat 0.162
Han Yuru, Chen YongfuRural economy2016Based on the income stratified QUADDS model, this paper makes an empirical analysis of the factors influencing food consumption in migrant workers’ familiesRuralstaple food 1.073 vegetables and fruit 1.180 oil and fat 1.077 meat 0.925
Zhang Yumei, Xu Xin, Li ZhiqiangConsumer economy2012Dynamic analysis of food consumption demand—based on rural household survey dataRuralstaple food 0.275 vegetables and fruit 0.345 oil and fat 0.375 meat 0.315 aquatic products 0.465
Urbanstaple food −1.425 vegetables and fruit −0.750 oil and fat −0.500 meat −0.750 aquatic products −0.950
Zheng Zhihao, Gao Ying, Zhao YinxuanEconomics (Quarterly) 2015The influence of income growth on the consumption pattern of food in urban areasUrbanstaple food 0.322 vegetables and fruit 0.441 oil and fat 0.277 aquatic products 0.784 eggs 0.487 dairy products 0.908
Huang JiaxuanMaster’s thesis2014Study on food consumption and nutrition of farmers in poor areas of western ChinaRuralstaple food 0.600 vegetables and fruit 1.159 oil and fat 0.800 meat 1.626 eggs 1.293
Zhang Mingyang, Zhang QiConsumer economy2015Study on the transformation of food consumption structure in rural residents—an application of the QUAIDS model that addresses expenditure constraints and embeds demographic characteristicsRuraloil and fat 1.086 aquatic products 0.841 eggs 0.797
Li Dongsheng, Yang YiqunJournal of Wuhan University of Technology2001ELES model of food consumption needs of urban and rural residentsUrbanstaple food 0.133 vegetables and fruit 0.312 oil and fat 0.676 meat 0.111 eggs 0.482 other food 0.592
Ruralstaple food 0.166 vegetables and fruit 0.405 oil and fat 0.574 meat 0.358 eggs 0.679 other food 0.619
Yuan Mengxuan, Li Xiaoyun, Huang MalanRural economy and technology2019Analysis of nutritional income elasticity of urban and rural residents in Hubei Province—consumption and nutritional changes of staple foods Ruralprotein −0.280 fat 0.265
Urbanprotein −0.133 fat 0.223
Han Xiao, Qi Weitian, Wang XinghuaJournal of Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics (Social Science Edition)2019Impact of income increases of urban residents’ on food consumption patterns: based on two-phase EASI modelUrbanstaple food −0.673 vegetables and fruit 0.697 oil and fat 0.078 meat 1.457 aquatic products 4.451 eggs 0.368
Wang Jun, Zhuang Tianhui, Chen XueJournal of Sichuan Agricultural University2017Analysis of the consumption of livestock products in XinjiangNationstaple food −0.140 meat 0.375 aquatic products 0.574 eggs 0.320 dairy products 0.274
Mu Yueying, Haosan Sakahara, Minxin MatsudaEconomic problems2001Analysis of THEDS model of China’s urban and rural consumer demand systemNationstaple food 0.240 meat 0.275 vegetables and fruit 0.397 aquatic products 0.574 eggs 0.620 dairy products 0.574
Li Guojing, Chen Yongfu, Yang ChunhuaAgricultural technology economy2018Income growth, difference in household registration and nutritional consumption—based on research on migrant workers’ families entering the cityRuralcalorie 0.593 protein 0.610 fat 0.533
Zhang Chewei, Cai FangEconomics (Quarterly) 2002China’s poor rural food demand and nutritional elasticityRuralcalorie 0.145
Ye Hui, Wang YapengAgricultural technology economy2007Analysis of the impact of changes in staple food prices and income on national nutritionNationcalorie −0.124 protein −0.138 fat −0.143
Yuan MengxuanMaster’s thesis2017Study on consumption and nutritional elasticity of staple foods in Hubei ProvinceUrbancalorie 0.175 protein 0.265 fat 0.147 vitamin −0.280
Ruralcalorie 0.221 protein 0.223 fat 0.208 vitamin −0.133
Dong Guoxin, Lu WenchengForum on Statistics and Information2009Analysis of AIDS model of food consumption among Chinese residents—citing western urban areas as an exampleUrbanstaple food 0.080 vegetables and fruit 0.807 oil and fat 1.652 meat 0.523 eggs 1.714 other food 1.254
Li Guojing, Chen YongfuSouthern economy2018Income level, aging and nutritional intake—based on data on urban households in Guangdong ProvinceUrbanprotein 0.749 fat 0.678 vitamin 0.661
Fengying Nie, Jiaqi Huang, and Jieying BiProceedings of 2013 World Agricultural Outlook Conference2013Food Consumption of Households in Poverty-Stricken Areas of West China: The Case of Shaanxi, Yunnan, and GuizhouRuralstaple food 0.649 vegetables and fruit 0.870 oil and fat 1.279 meat 0.769 eggs 1.739 other food 1.165
Zhihao Zheng and Shida Rastegari HenneberryJournal of Agricultural and Resource Economics2010The Impact of Changes in Income Distribution on Current and Future Food Demand in Urban China Urbanstaple food 0.136 vegetables and fruit 0.249 oil and fat 0.356 meat 0.318 eggs 0.458 dairy products 0.332 other food 0.368
Brian W. Goulda, Hector J. VillarrealbAgricultural Economics2006An assessment of the current structure of food demand in urban ChinaUrbanstaple food 0.955 vegetables and fruit 0.950 oil and fat 0.850 meat 1.340 eggs 1.400 dairy products 0.620 other food 0.960
X.M. Gao, Eric J. Wailes, and Gail L. CramerAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics1996A Two-Stage Rural Household Demand Analysis: Microdata Evidence from Jiangsu Province, ChinaRuralstaple food 0.516 vegetables and fruit 1.258 oil and fat 0.722 meat 0.722 eggs 0.892 calorie 0.787
Shenggen Fan, Gail Cramer, Eric WailesAgricultural Economics1994Food demand in rural China: evidence from rural household survey Ruralstaple food 0.303 vegetables and fruit 1.097 meat 1.688
Fred Gale and Kuo HuangEconomic Research Report2009Demand for Food Quantity and Quality in ChinaRuralstaple food 0.087 vegetables and fruit 0.263 oil and fat 0.453 meat 0.293 eggs 0.927 other food 0.343
Urbanstaple food −0.073 vegetables and fruit 0.009 oil and fat 0.430 meat −0.045 eggs 0.545
Kaiyu Lyu, Xuemei Zhang, Li Xing and Chongshang ZhangInternational Conference of Agricultural Economists2015Impact of Rising Food Prices on Food Consumption and Nutrition of China’s Rural PoorRuralstaple food −0.096 vegetables and fruit 0.218 oil and fat 0.320 meat 0.126 eggs 0.447 other food 0.940 calorie 0.381 protein 0.023 fat 0.03 vitamin 0.167
Xiao Ye and J. Edward TaylorEconomic Development and Cultural Change1995The Impact of Income Growth on Farm Household Nutrient Intake: A Case Study of a Prosperous Rural Area in Northern ChinaRuralstaple food 0.462 vegetables and fruit 1.418 oil and fat1.074 meat 1.074 dairy products 1.124 calorie 1.26 protein 0.258 fat 0.216
Huang, Kuo S.
Gale, Fred
China Agricultural Economic Review2009Food demand in China: Income, quality, and nutrient effectsUrbanstaple food −0.065 vegetables and fruit 0.005 oil and fat 0.451 meat 0.275 eggs 0.536 other food 0.451 protein 0.065 fat 0.178 vitamin 0.147 minerals 0.243
Tian, Xu
Yu, Xiaohua
Frontiers of Economics in China2013The demand for nutrients in ChinaUrbanprotein 0.164 fat 0.273 vitamin 0.161 minerals 0.225
Zheng ZhihaoBeta Working Paper2011Household Food Demand by Income Category: Evidence from Household Survey Data in an Urban Chinese ProvinceUrbanstaple food 0.801 vegetables and fruit 0.842 oil and fat 0.758 meat 0.885 eggs 1.246 other food 0.910 protein 0.903 fat 0.984 vitamin 0.986
Hovhannisyan, Vardges
Mendis, Sachintha
Bastian, Chris
Agricultural Economics (United Kingdom)2019An econometric analysis of demand for food quantity and quality in urban ChinaUrbanstaple food 0.571 vegetables and fruit 0.624 oil and fat 0.69 meat 0.284 eggs 0.075 other food 0.677
Tong Han and Thomas I. WahlJournal of Agricultural and Applied Economics1998China’s Rural Household Demand for Fruit and VegetablesRuralstaple food 1.092 vegetables and fruit 1.029 oil and fat 0.592 meat 0.462 dairy products 0.620
Brian W. Goulda, Hector J. VillarrealbAgricultural Economics2006An assessment of the current structure of food demand in urban ChinaUrbanvegetables and fruit 0.950 oil and fat 0.850 meat 1.340 eggs 1.400 other food 0.960
Davis, JohnApplied Economics2008Household Food Demand in Rural China Ruralstaple food 0.655 vegetables and fruit 0.445 meat 0.818 eggs 0.500 dairy products 0.520 other food 0.630
Christine Burggraf1, Lena Kuhn1, Qiran Zhao1, Thomas Glauben1, Ramona Teuber1Journal of Integrative Agriculture2014Economic Growth and Nutrition Transition: An Empirical Analysis Comparing Demand Elasticities For Foods in China and Russia Nationvegetables and fruit 0.504 oil and fat 1.200 meat 0.500 eggs 1.38 dairy products 0.872 other food 0.911
Yang Gao and Zhihao ZhengChina Agricultural Economic Review2020Is nutritional status associated with income growth? Evidence from Chinese adults Nationprotein 0.076 fat 0.112 vitamin 0.230 minerals 0.048

References

  1. IEG Members. Global Nutrition Report: The State of Global Nutrition. 2021. Available online: https://globalnutritionreport.org/reports/2021-global-nutrition-report/ (accessed on 17 October 2022).
  2. UN. Global Sustainable Development Report 2019: The Future Is Now—Science for Achieving Sustainable Development. 2019. Available online: https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/gsdr2019 (accessed on 11 September 2019).
  3. Cui, T.; Xi, J.; Tang, C.; Song, J.; He, J.; Brytek-Matera, A. The Relationship between Music and Food Intake: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients 2021, 13, 2571. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Yu, X.; Abler, D. Matching Food with Mouths: A Statistical Explanation to the Abnormal Decline of per Capita Food Consumption in Rural China. Food Policy 2016, 63, 36–43. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  5. FAO; IFAD; UNICEF; WFP; WHO. In Brief to the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2020. Transforming Food Systems for Affordable Healthy Diets; FAO: Rome, Italy, 2020. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Huang, Y.; Tian, X. Food Accessibility, Diversity of Agricultural Production and Dietary Pattern in Rural China. Food Policy 2019, 84, 92–102. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. FAO; IFAD; WFP; WHO; UNICEF. Food Security and Nutrition in the World Safeguarding Against Economic Slowdowns and Downturn; FAO: New York, NY, USA, 2019; Available online: https://www.who.int/publications/m/item/state-of-food-security-and-nutrition-in-the-world-2019 (accessed on 18 June 2020).
  8. Arau, S.J.; Tirode, F.; Coin, F.; Pospiech, H.; Syva, J.E.; Stucki, M.; Hu, U.; Egly, J.; Wood, R.D.; Adamo, A.; et al. Overweight Perception: Associations with Weight Control Goals, Attempts and Practices among Chinese Female College Students. Physiol. Behav. 2017, 176, 139–148. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  9. National Health Commitment, People’s Republic of China, Healthy Oral Action Program (2019–2025). Available online: http://www.gov.cn/xinwen/2019-02/16/content_5366239.htm (accessed on 16 February 2020).
  10. Paloma, G.Y. Income Growth and Malnutrition in Africa: Is There a Need for Region- Specific Policies? In Proceedings of the 90th Annual Conference of the Agricultural Economics Society, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK, 4–6 April 2016; pp. 1–32. [Google Scholar]
  11. Ecker, O.; Comstock, A. Income and Price Elasticities of Food Demand (E-FooD) Dataset: Documentation of Estimation Methodology; International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI): Washington, DC, USA, 2021; pp. 1–17. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Gallet, C.A. The Income Elasticity of Meat: A Meta-Analysis. Aust. J. Agric. Resour. Econ. 2010, 54, 477–490. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  13. Popkin, B.M. Synthesis and Implications: China’s Nutrition Transition in the Context of Changes across Other Low- and Middle-Income Countries. Obes. Rev. 2014, 15, 60–67. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  14. Haen, H.; Klasen, S.; Qaim, M. What Do We Really Know? Metrics for Food Insecurity and Undernutrition. Food Policy 2011, 36, 760–769. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  15. Han, T.; Gail, L.; Cramer, T.I.W. Rural Household Food Consumption in China: Evidence from the Rural Household Survey. In Proceedings of the 1997 WAEA Meeting, Reno, NY, USA, 13–16 July 1997; Volume 14, pp. 121–128. [Google Scholar]
  16. Hovhannisyan, V.; Mendis, S.; Bastian, C. An Econometric Analysis of Demand for Food Quantity and Quality in Urban China. Agric. Econ. 2019, 50, 3–13. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Carter, C.A.; Zhong, F. Rural Wheat Consumption in China. Am. J. Agric. Econ. 1999, 81, 582–592. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Zheng, Z.; Henneberry, S.R.; Zhao, Y.; Gao, Y. Predicting the Changes in the Structure of Food Demand in China. Agribusiness 2019, 35, 301–328. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Hanna, K.L.; Collins, P.F. Relationship between Living Alone and Food and Nutrient Intake. Nutr. Rev. 2015, 73, 594–611. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  20. Liu, H.; Hu, X. Effects of Income Growth on Nutritional Demand of Urban Residents in China. J. Agrotech. Econ. 2013, 2, 95–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Tian, X. The Demand for Nutrients in China. Front. Econ. China 2013, 8, 186–206. [Google Scholar]
  22. Zhang, C.; Zhang, X.; Zhang, X.; Lyu, K. Determination of Rural Poverty Line in China—A method based on Nutrition Perspective. Econ. Political Wkly. 2014, 11, 58–64+111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Nie, P.; Sousa-Poza, A. A Fresh Look at Calorie-Income Elasticities in China. China Agric. Econ. Rev. 2016, 8, 55–80. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Chen, Y.; Li, G. Income Level, Aging and Nutritional Intake: A Study Based on Urban Household Data in Guangdong Province. South. Econ. 2018, 13, 48–62. [Google Scholar]
  25. Tian, X.; Yu, X. Using Semiparametric Models to Study Nutrition Improvement and Dietary Change with Different Indices: The Case of China. Food Policy 2015, 53, 67–81. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. You, J.; Imai, K.S.; Gaiha, R. Declining Nutrient Intake in a Growing China: Does Household Heterogeneity Matter? World Dev. 2016, 77, 171–191. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  27. Ogundari, K.; Abdulai, A. Examining the Heterogeneity in Calorie—Income Elasticities: A Meta-Analysis. Food Policy 2013, 40, 119–128. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Santeramo, F.G.; Shabnam, N. The Income-Elasticity of Calories, Macro- and Micro-Nutrients: What Is the Literature Telling Us? Food Res. Int. 2015, 76, 932–937. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Zhou, D.; Yu, X. Calorie Elasticities with Income Dynamics: Evidence from the Submitted Article Calorie Elasticities with Income Dynamics: Evidence from the Literature. Appl. Econ. Perspect. Policy 2015, 37, 575–601. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  30. Zamora, J.; Abraira, V.; Muriel, A.; Khan, K.; Coomarasamy, A. Meta-DiSc: A Software for Meta-Analysis of Test Accuracy Data. BMC Med. Res. Methodol. 2006, 6, 31. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  31. Gallet, C.A. The Demand for Alcohol: A Meta-Analysis of Elasticities. Aust. J. Agric. Resour. Econ. 2007, 51, 121–135. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  32. Chen, D.; Abler, D.; Zhou, D.; Yu, X.; Thompson, W. Submitted Article A Meta-Analysis of Food Demand Elasticities for China. Appl. Econ. Perspect. Policy 2016, 38, 50–72. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  33. Yu, X. Meat Consumption in China and Its Impact on International Food Security: Status Quo, Trends, and Policies. J. Integr. Agric. 2015, 14, 989–994. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. De los Santos-Montero, L.A.; Bravo-Ureta, B.E.; von Cramon-Taubadel, S.; Hasiner, E. The Performance of Natural Resource Management Interventions in Agriculture: Evidence from Alternative Meta-Regression Analyses. Ecol. Econ. 2020, 171, 106605. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Colen, L.; Melo, P.C.; Abdul-Salam, Y.; Roberts, D.; Mary, S.; Gomez, Y.; Paloma, S. Income Elasticities for Food, Calories and Nutrients across Africa: A Meta-Analysis. Food Policy 2018, 77, 116–132. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  36. Stanley, T.D.; Doucouliagos, H. Meta-Regression Analysis in Economics and Business; Routledge: Abingdon-on-Thames, UK, 2012. [Google Scholar]
  37. Green, R. The Effect of Rising Food Prices on Food Consumption: Systematic Review with Meta-Regression. BMJ 2013, 346, f3703. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  38. Salois, M.J.; Tiffin, R.; Balcombe, K.G. Impact of Income on Nutrient Intakes: Implications for Undernourishment and Obesity. J. Dev. Stud. 2012, 48, 1716–1730. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  39. Zhou, D.; Yu, X.; Abler, D.; Chen, D. Projecting Meat and Cereals Demand for China Based on a Meta-Analysis of Income Elasticities. China Econ. Rev. 2020, 59, 101135. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  40. Gallet, C.A.; List, J.A. Cigarette Demand: A Meta-Analysis of Elasticities. Health Econ. 2003, 12, 821–835. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  41. Tian, X.; Yu, X. China Economic Review the Enigmas of TFP in China: A Meta-Analysis. China Econ. Rev. 2012, 23, 396–414. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  42. Taylor, J.E. The Impact of Income Growth on Farm Household Nutrient Intake: A Case Study of a Prosperous Rural Area in Northern China. Econ. Dev. Cult. Chang. 1995, 43, 805–819. [Google Scholar]
  43. Ali, M.; Villa, K.M.; Joshi, J. Health and Hunger: Nutrient Response to Income Depending on Caloric Availability in Nepal. Agric. Econ. 2018, 49, 611–621. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  44. Dolgopolova, I.; Teuber, R. Consumers’ Willingness to Pay for Health Benefits in Food Products: A Meta-Analysis. Appl. Econ. Perspect. Policy 2018, 40, 333–352. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  45. Jiang, B.; Davis, J. Household Food Demand in Rural China. Appl. Econ. 2007, 39, 373–380. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  46. Zheng, Z.; Henneberry, S.R. Estimating the Impacts of Rising Food Prices on Nutrient Intake in Urban China. China Econ. Rev. 2012, 23, 1090–1103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  47. Yu, X.; Abler, D. The Demand for Food Quality in Rural China. Am. J. Agric. Econ. 2009, 91, 57–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  48. Lyu, K.; Zhang, X.; Xing, L.; Zhang, C. Impact of Rising Food Prices on Food Consumption and Nutrition of China’s Rural Poor. In Proceedings of the International Association of Agricultural Economists 2015 Conference, Milan, Italy, 9–14 August 2015; pp. 1–27. [Google Scholar]
  49. Afshin, A.; Peñalvo, J.L.; Del Gobbo, L.; Silva, J.; Michaelson, M.; O’Flaherty, M.; Capewell, S.; Spiegelman, D.; Danaei, G.; Mozaffarian, D. The Prospective Impact of Food Pricing on Improving Dietary Consumption: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. PLoS ONE 2017, 12, e0172277. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  50. Wu, B.; Shang, X.; Chen, Y. Household Dairy Demand by Income Groups in an Urban Chinese Province: A Multistage Budgeting Approach. Agribusiness 2021, 37, 629–649. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  51. Lewbel, A. The Rank of Demand Systems: Theory and Nonparametric Estimation. Econometrica 1991, 59, 711. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  52. Ogundari, K.; Bolarinwa, O.D. Impact of Agricultural Innovation Adoption: A Meta-Analysis. Aust. J. Agric. Resour. Econ. 2018, 62, 217–236. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  53. Alinaghi, N.; Reed, W.R. Meta-Analysis and Publication Bias: How Well Does the FAT-PET-PEESE Procedure Work? Res. Synth. Methods 2018, 9, 285–311. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  54. Egger, M.; Smith, G.D.; Schneider, M.; Minder, C. Bias in Meta-Analysis Detected by a Simple, Graphical Test. BMJ 1997, 315, 629–634. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
  55. Stanley, T.D. Wheat from Chaff: Meta-Analysis as Quantitative Literature Review. J. Econ. Perspect. 2001, 15, 131–150. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  56. Stanley, T.D. Meta-Regression Methods for Detecting and Estimating Empirical Effects in the Presence of Publication Selection*. Oxf. Bull. Econ. Stat. 2008, 70, 103–127. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  57. Penn, J.M.; Hu, W. Understanding Hypothetical Bias: An Enhanced Meta-Analysis. Am. J. Agric. Econ. 2018, 100, 1186–1206. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  58. Golden, C.D.; Koehn, J.Z.; Shepon, A.; Passarelli, S.; Free, C.M.; Viana, D.F.; Matthey, H.; Eurich, J.G.; Gephart, J.A.; Fluet-Chouinard, E.; et al. Aquatic Foods to Nourish Nations. Nature 2021, 598, 315–320. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  59. Gao, Y.; Zheng, Z.; Henneberry, S.R. Is Nutritional Status Associated with Income Growth? Evidence from Chinese Adults. China Agric. Econ. Rev. 2020, 12, 507–525. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  60. Burggraf, C.; Kuhn, L.; Zhao, Q.; Glauben, T.; Teuber, R. Economic Growth and Nutrition Transition: An Empirical Analysis Comparing Demand Elasticities for Foods in China and Russia Economic. In Proceedings of the 2014 International Congress, Ljubljana, Slovenia, 26–29 August 2014; pp. 1–20. [Google Scholar]
  61. Gong, W.; Liu, A.; Yao, Y.; Ma, Y.; Ding, C.; Song, C.; Yuan, F.; Zhang, Y.; Feng, G.; Chen, Z.; et al. Nutrient Supplement Use among the Chinese Population: A Cross-Sectional Study of the 2010–2012 China Nutrition and Health Surveillance. Nutrients 2018, 10, 1733. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  62. Ren, Y.J.; Campos, B.C.; Loy, J.P.; Brosig, S. Low-Income and Overweight in China: Evidence from a Life-Course Utility Model. J. Integr. Agric. 2019, 18, 1753–1767. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  63. Ortega, D.L.; Wang, H.H.; Wu, L.; Hong, S.J. Retail Channel and Consumer Demand for Food Quality in China. China Econ. Rev. 2015, 36, 359–366. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  64. Hovhannisyan, V.; Devadoss, S. Effects of Urbanization on Food Demand in China. Empir. Econ. 2020, 58, 699–721. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Figure 1. Box plot of food–income elasticities synthesis.
Figure 1. Box plot of food–income elasticities synthesis.
Nutrients 14 04711 g001
Figure 2. Box plot of calorie-, and nutrient-income elasticities synthesis.
Figure 2. Box plot of calorie-, and nutrient-income elasticities synthesis.
Nutrients 14 04711 g002
Figure 3. Selection of primary studies and construction of meta-sample.
Figure 3. Selection of primary studies and construction of meta-sample.
Nutrients 14 04711 g003
Table 1. Summary statistics of meta-sample.
Table 1. Summary statistics of meta-sample.
Income ElasticitiesFood-Income ElasticitiesCalorie-Income ElasticitiesNutrient-Income Elasticities
NumberMeanStd. Dev.NumberMeanStd. Dev.NumberMeanStd. Dev.
Total15370.6900.6851470.2120.3251530.2980.315
Published features
English3850.7240.362700.1870.284690.2490.290
Chinese11520.6780.766770.2330.367840.3420.345
Journal12910.6950.7031050.2030.3421070.3330.334
Other2460.6620.593420.2880.293460.2810.304
Area
Rural6760.7550.579490.2420.267460.2250.184
Urban/Nation8610.5600.615560.1440.377610.3170.340
Data
Macro-aggregate5530.7220.804630.1780.269610.2700.229
Micro-survey9840.6540.568840.2650.368920.3500.371
Panel9530.4390.672700.1370.181770.1660.165
Time series960.5670.447170.2060.104230.2440.029
Other data4880.6800.491600.3240.351540.5260.193
Income measure
Expenditure6150.9240.376280.1940.149230.3860.384
Income9220.5310.7961190.2160.3501300.2880.318
Type of estimator
FE/RE1040.8780.744140.1000.001230.0420.030
IV/GMM640.9230.087280.5270.215310.4670.257
LS9730.4930.608840.1130.280840.2050.275
MLE640.9370.22170.985n/a80.903n/a
SUR3320.9080.488
Type of model
Demand system13510.7770.659700.2800.362770.3870.392
Single equation1860.0590.544770.1570.297770.2490.219
Type of budget
Multi2640.5400.686280.3460.379230.6010.544
Single12730.7210.6851190.1790.3141300.2630.283
Model_rank 33261.0620.482 n/an/a80.1140.000
Model_rank 210250.5900.6991470.2270.3251450.3170.321
Type of food
Staple food2420.1460.807------
Vegetables and fruit2450.4341.096------
Meat2700.8651.099------
Oil and fat1510.4920.673------
Aquatic products2151.0661.078------
Eggs2200.7441.894------
Dairy911.0840.613------
Other food1051.1020.759------
Type of nutrients
Protein------200.3030.296
Fat------160.3240.326
Vitamin------80.3040.235
Minerals------60.2480.426
Note: n/a: not applicable. Std. Dev.: Standard Deviation. FE/RE: Fixed Effects/Random Effects. IV/GMM: Instrumental variables estimation/Generalized Methods of Moments. LS: Least Squares. MLE: Maximum Likelihood Estimate. SUR: Quasi-Unrelated Regression.
Table 2. Description of the variables.
Table 2. Description of the variables.
CategoryVariablesDescription
Published featuresPub_journalDummy variable: 1 = peer-reviewed journal, 0 = report/working paper
Pub_chineseDummy variable: 1 = Chinese, 0 = English
Study areaH_regionDummy variable: 1 = rural, 0 = other (including urban and nation)
Income measureH_incomeDummy variable: 1 = total income, 0 = total expenditure
DataD_microDummy variable: 1 = micro-level survey data, 0 = macro-level aggregate data
D_panelDummy variable: 1 = panel, 0 = others
D_time seriesDummy variable: 1 = time series, 0 = others
Model and methodModel_type
Budget_stage
Dummy variable: 1 = demand system, 0 = pragmatic model
Dummy variable: 1 = single-stage, 0 = multi-stage
Model_rankDummy variable: 1 = model_rank 3, 0 = model_ rank 2
Per capita income levellncomeContinuous variable: Log of per-capita annual disposable income
Food groupStaple food, Vegetables and fruit, Meat, Oil and fat, Dairy, Aquatic products, Eggs, Other foodDummy variable: 1 = * food, 0 = others
Nutrient groupProtein, Fat, Vitamin, MineralsDummy variable: 1 = * nutrient, 0 = others
Interaction ** lnincomeInteractions between individual food or nutrient dummy variables (represented by *) and logarithms of per capita income
Note: Individual food or nutrient dummy variables (represented by *)
Table 3. The results of FAT-PET.
Table 3. The results of FAT-PET.
VariablesFoodCalorieNutrition
1 / S E (empirical effect- β 0 )0.3840.417 *0.661 *
(1.64)(1.89)(1.85)
X -variables
H_income / S E −0.116−0.230−0.406
(−1.05)(−0.99)(−1.18)
Model_type / S E 0.767 ***−0.240−0.284
(3.15)(−1.50)(−0.89)
Model_rank / S E 0.0695
(0.83)
Z −variables
Pub_journal22.55 ***−7.1830.327
(4.90)(−0.64)(0.02)
H_region4.195−8.175−6.106
(1.34)(−0.70)(−0.40)
D_micro1.942−21.98 *−11.42
(0.86)(−1.97)(−0.40)
D_panel4.690 *−11.53−13.29
D_time series(1.99)(−0.90)(−0.75)
−3.443−27.91−2.424
(−0.90)(−1.64)(−0.10)
Budget_stage0.53232.28 **17.26
(0.16)(2.57)(0.90)
Constant (publication bias− β 1 )−31.39 ***46.62 ***33.91
(−5.78)(3.59)(1.25)
Number of observations1537147153
R20.9970.8210.577
Note: t-values are given in parenthesis. * t < 0.1, ** t < 0.05, *** t < 0.01.
Table 4. Results from the meta-regressions of food–income elasticities.
Table 4. Results from the meta-regressions of food–income elasticities.
VariablesOLSWLS
PublicationPub_journal (1 = peer-reviewed journal, 0 = report/working paper)−0.0567−0.0793
(−0.21)(−0.41)
Pub_chinese (1 = Chinese, 0 = English)−0.1290.0570
(−0.57)(0.37)
Study areaH_region(1 = rural, 0 = other)0.311 *0.745 ***
(1.98)(5.15)
DataD_micro (1 = survey data, 0 = aggregate data)−0.296−0.312 **
(−1.36)(−2.11)
D_panel (1 = panel, 0 = others)−0.109−0.214 *
(−0.69)(−1.75)
D_time series (1 = time series, 0 = others)−0.2190.559
(−0.48)(0.45)
Income measureH_income (1 = total income, 0 = total expenditure)−0.354 **−0.166 *
(−2.03)(−1.69)
Model and methodModel_type (1 = demand system, 0 = pragmatic model)0.1850.382
(0.69)(1.38)
Budget_stage (1 = single-stage, 0 = multi-stage e)−0.0515−0.0788
(−0.25)(−0.51)
Model_rank (1 = model_rank 3, 0 = model_ rank 2)0.490 **0.761 ***
(2.20)(4.17)
Types of foodStaple food−1.833−1.422 *
(−0.47)(−1.98)
Vegetables and fruit4.1855.473
(1.65)(1.59)
Oil and fat−1.783−0.252
(−0.91)(−0.13)
Dairy0.701−2.107
(0.23)(−0.86)
Aquatic products−2.1793.009 ***
(−1.35)(−2.99)
Eggs−1.5400.883
(−0.89)(0.63)
Other food−1.085−3.526 *
(−0.58)(−1.76)
Incomelnincome−0.206−0.270 *
(−0.69)(−1.40)
Interaction *Staple food * lnincome−0.231−0.322 *
(0.53)(1.95)
Vegetables & fruit * lnincome−0.484−0.552
(−1.67)(−1.48)
Oil and fat * lnincome0.2390.0574
(1.06)(0.25)
Dairy product * lnincome−0.1000.217
(−0.30)(0.79)
Aquatic products * lnincome0.2400.359 ***
(1.23)(2.80)
Eggs * lnincome0.231−0.0395
(1.09)(−0.22)
Other food * lnincome0.1480.414 *
(0.68)(1.84)
Constant2.3485.371
(0.60)(1.23)
Number of observations15371516
Number of studies5857
R20.5400.746
Note: t-values are given in parenthesis. * t < 0.1, ** t < 0.05, *** t < 0.01.
Table 5. Results from the meta-regressions of calorie-, nutrient–income elasticities.
Table 5. Results from the meta-regressions of calorie-, nutrient–income elasticities.
VariablesCalorieNutrient
PublicationPub_journal0.107−1.546 *
(0.50)(−11.48)
Pub_chinese−0.0428−0.711 **
(−0.26)(−21.56)
Study areaH_region0.1280.0553
(0.87)(3.45)
DataD_micro−0.07910.171
(−0.33)(2.46)
D_panel−0.2681.012 **
D_time series(−0.69)(17.45)
−0.946 *1.183 **
(−1.86)(13.58)
Income measureIncome−0.2471.176 **
(−0.99)(−10.64)
Model and methodModel_type−0.478−1.187 **
(−1.34)(−35.57)
Budget_stage0.844 ***0.623
(3.73)(6.14)
Types of nutrientsFat 1.526
(5.26)
Vitamin −1.216 *
(11.57)
Minerals 6.596
(3.25)
Incomelnincome−0.121 *−0.0122
(1.95)(0.60)
* lnincomeFat * lnincome −0.0796
(−2.36)
Vitamin * lnincome 0.169 **
(−54.04)
Minerals * lnincome −0.757
(−3.58)
Constant 2.261 **
(15.00)
Number of observations147153
Number of studies2019
R20.9420.989
Note: t-values are given in parenthesis. * t < 0.1, ** t < 0.05, *** t < 0.01.
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Zhao, J.; Huang, J.; Nie, F. The Income Elasticities of Food, Calories, and Nutrients in China: A Meta-Analysis. Nutrients 2022, 14, 4711. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14224711

AMA Style

Zhao J, Huang J, Nie F. The Income Elasticities of Food, Calories, and Nutrients in China: A Meta-Analysis. Nutrients. 2022; 14(22):4711. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14224711

Chicago/Turabian Style

Zhao, Jinlu, Jiaqi Huang, and Fengying Nie. 2022. "The Income Elasticities of Food, Calories, and Nutrients in China: A Meta-Analysis" Nutrients 14, no. 22: 4711. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14224711

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop