Vegetables and Pulses Outlook No. (VGS-333-01) 15 pp
Vegetables and Melons Outlook: August 2009
Growth over time in the demand for fresh vegetables for at-home consumption may slow because of differences in the behavior of younger and older birth cohorts. A birth cohort includes people born in the same year and is similar in concept to a generation. People born around the same point in history may share common behaviors that they carry throughout their lives independent of age. People born more recently are found to spend less money for fresh vegetables than older Americans do. Changes in how people purchase and consume food may help to explain these effects.
Keywords: Fresh vegetables, cohort effects, food demand, demand projections
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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