Food Cost Review, 1950-97
- by Howard Elitzak
- 6/1/1999
Overview
Food prices, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), increased 2.6 percent in 1997. This increase was greater than the overall increase in the CPI (which rose 2.3 percent) for the third consecutive year. Higher charges for processing and distributing food, as measured by the farm-to-retail price spread, were primarily responsible for the 1997 increase. The prices farmers received for commodities, as measured by the farm value of USDA's market basket of foods, dropped 4.4 percent. The farm value share of the food dollar spent in grocery stores in 1997 was 23 percent, a decrease of 2 percent from 1996. The farm-to-retail price spread of USDA's market basket of foods rose 4.7 percent, partly reflecting higher prices of inputs, such as labor.
Download
-
Entire report
Download PDF -
Abstract, Contents, Summary
Download PDF -
Why USDA Measures Price Spreads
Download PDF -
The 1997 Economy: An Overview
Download PDF -
Price Spreads for Selected Foods
Download PDF -
Food Industry Costs, Profits, and Productivity
Download PDF -
Food Spending in Relation to Income
Download PDF -
Food Spending as a Proportion of Income
Download PDF -
Special Article: Historical Changes in CPI-Food Weights
Download PDF -
Tables
Download PDF