Cost and Affordability of Habitual and Recommended Diets in Welfare-Dependent Households in Australia

Author:

Lewis Meron1,Nash Stephen1,Lee Amanda J.1

Affiliation:

1. School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Herston, QLD 4006, Australia

Abstract

It is crucial to ensure healthy diets are affordable in low socioeconomic groups, such as welfare-dependent households, who experience higher rates of diet-related disease than others. This study assessed the cost of habitual (unhealthy) and recommended (healthy) diets in six welfare-dependent and six other, comparable Australian households, using either popular branded products or the cheapest available alternatives. It also assessed diet affordability in welfare-dependent households, before and after modest increases in government welfare payments introduced in early September 2023. Results confirmed that recommended diets were less expensive than habitual diets in all households unless the cheapest available products were included. This strategy reduced habitual diet costs by 35–37% and recommended diet costs by 30–32%. The lower cost differential could aid perceptions that healthy foods are more expensive than unhealthy foods. In April 2023, 23–37% of the income of welfare-dependent households with children was required to purchase recommended diets; this reduced only to 20–35% in September 2023. Hence, the increases in welfare payments were insufficient to meaningfully improve the affordability of healthy diets in the most vulnerable Australians. In the current cost-of-living crisis, there is an urgent need for more welfare support to help purchase healthy diets. Monitoring of diet cost and affordability is also required.

Funder

The Australian Prevention Partnership Centre

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference49 articles.

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3. National Health and Medical Research Council (2013). Australian Dietary Guidelines—Providing the Scientific Evidence for Healthier Australian Diets, National Health and Medical Research Council.

4. National Health and Medical Research Council (2013). Australian Guide to Healthy Eating, National Health and Medical Research Council.

5. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2017, November 12). 4364.0.55.007—Australian Health Survey: Nutrition First Results—Foods and Nutrients, 2011–2012, Available online: http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/DetailsPage/4364.0.55.0072011-12?OpenDocument.

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