A new ERS food dollar series measures annual expenditures on domestically produced food by individuals living in the United States and provides a detailed answer to the question "For what do our food dollars pay?" This new data product replaces the old marketing bill series, which was discontinued due to measurement problems and limited scope. The new food dollar series is composed of three primary series, shedding light on different aspects of evolving supply chain relationships. The marketing bill series, like the old marketing bill series, identifies the distribution of the food dollar between farm and marketing shares. The industry group series identifies the distribution of the food dollar among 10 distinct food supply chain industry g...
The amount of money people spend on food, beverages, and tobacco is an excellent measure of a countr...
In 1991, about 45 percent of all U.S. spending for food went for food purchased and consumed away fr...
There is and has been a great deal of confusion about food marketing margins and as to who gets what...
The Food Expenditure Series tracks annual and monthly trends in the U.S. food system since 1869. Pro...
The series currently used to estimate food expenditures yield incomplete and often conflicting data...
A new measure of U.S. food expenditures, called the total expenditures (TE) series, was developed w ...
How much are food costs changing? Why? How much of the consumer food dollar goes to the farmer an...
This poster assesses the breakdown of the Canadian food dollar between farm and marketing costs. It...
Marketing costs are by far the largest chunk of food expenditures. Over three-fourths of what U.S. c...
July 2015.Includes bibliographical references.In response to growing public interest in regionally f...
The United States Department of Agriculture has long published statistics on the farmer's share of t...
Source: Economic Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Okrent, A.M., H. Elitzak...
ilyrhile consumer food expenditures increased only 2.7 percent in 1991, food marketing costs—as meas...
Excerpts from the report: Material presented in this publication represents, for the most part, com...
Abstract For understanding the distribution of food dollar which we pay for our expenditure and how ...
The amount of money people spend on food, beverages, and tobacco is an excellent measure of a countr...
In 1991, about 45 percent of all U.S. spending for food went for food purchased and consumed away fr...
There is and has been a great deal of confusion about food marketing margins and as to who gets what...
The Food Expenditure Series tracks annual and monthly trends in the U.S. food system since 1869. Pro...
The series currently used to estimate food expenditures yield incomplete and often conflicting data...
A new measure of U.S. food expenditures, called the total expenditures (TE) series, was developed w ...
How much are food costs changing? Why? How much of the consumer food dollar goes to the farmer an...
This poster assesses the breakdown of the Canadian food dollar between farm and marketing costs. It...
Marketing costs are by far the largest chunk of food expenditures. Over three-fourths of what U.S. c...
July 2015.Includes bibliographical references.In response to growing public interest in regionally f...
The United States Department of Agriculture has long published statistics on the farmer's share of t...
Source: Economic Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture. Okrent, A.M., H. Elitzak...
ilyrhile consumer food expenditures increased only 2.7 percent in 1991, food marketing costs—as meas...
Excerpts from the report: Material presented in this publication represents, for the most part, com...
Abstract For understanding the distribution of food dollar which we pay for our expenditure and how ...
The amount of money people spend on food, beverages, and tobacco is an excellent measure of a countr...
In 1991, about 45 percent of all U.S. spending for food went for food purchased and consumed away fr...
There is and has been a great deal of confusion about food marketing margins and as to who gets what...