Vegetables and Pulses Outlook No. (VGS-290) 51 pp
Vegetables and Melons Outlook: April 2002
According to preliminary ERS estimates, per capita vegetable and melon use (consumption) declined 1 percent in 2001 to 448 pounds. Fresh-market use (excluding potatoes) was unchanged at 173 pounds while freezing (down 1 percent) and canning (down 3 percent) use were lower. Per capita use of potatoes, the largest vegetable category, increased 1 percent to 140 pounds, reflecting lower prices stemming from the record-large 2000 fall potato crop. The forecast for 2002 suggests that per capita vegetable and melon use will rise 1 percent led by increased use of processing vegetables.
Keywords: vegetables, melons, potatoes, dry beans, dry peas, mushrooms, prices, productions, acreage, trade, per capita use, consumption
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- 2020
- 2010
- 2019
- Vegetables and Pulses Outlook: September 2019
- Vegetables and Pulses Outlook: May 2019
- Unpacking the Growth in Per Capita Availability of Fresh Market Tomatoes
- 2012
- Vegetables and Pulses Outlook; December 2012
- Vegetables and Pulses Outlook: September 2012
- Vegetables and Pulses Outlook: June 2012
- Vegetables and Pulses Outlook: March 2012
- 2000
- 2005
- Vegetables and Melons Outlook: December 2005
- Price Premiums Hold on as U.S. Organic Produce Market Expands
- 2004
- The Economics of Food Safety: The Case of Green Onions and Hepatitis A Outbreaks
- European Trading Arrangements in Fruits and Vegetables
- Organic Produce, Price Premiums, and Eco-Labeling in U.S. Farmers' Markets
- Factors Affecting Spinach Consumption in the United States
- 2003
- Vegetables and Melons Outlook: December 2003
- Vegetables and Melons Outlook: June 2003
- Factors Affecting U.S. Mushroom Consumption
- Vegetables and Melons Outlook: February 2003