A vast majority (84%) of consumers describe current grocery prices in their area as โhighโ to some degree, with 18% saying they are โvery high,โ according to the Consumer Food Insights Report conducted in March.
The survey-based report out of Purdue Universityโs Center for Food Demand Analysis and Sustainability assesses food spending, consumer satisfaction and values, support of agricultural and food policies, and trust in information sources. Purdue experts conducted and evaluated the survey, which included 1,200 consumers across the U.S.
This monthโs survey results revisit consumer experiences with food prices and home food production. The report also includes urban/rural classification as part of its demographic analysis this month. The analysis follows the U.S. Office of Management and Budgetโs classification of rural and urban, which is commonly used by the U.S. Department of Agricultureโs Economic Research Service in social and economic research.
โConsumers continue to express frustration with inflation, as general inflation and the economy are cited by 36% of consumers as the main factors influencing food prices,โ said the reportโs lead author, Joseph Balagtas, professor of agricultural economics at Purdue and director of CFDAS.
โNearly a quarter are unsure what is influencing food prices. Around 13% of consumers attribute current grocery prices to specific supply chain, production and labor issues, and 8% say corporate greed or price gouging are to blame,โ Balagtas said.
The annual food inflation rate over the past year is 2.6%. This is much lower than what consumers experienced between 2021 to 2023, when food inflation reached double digits for a few months. However, prices continue to rise, and many consumers are adapting their grocery shopping as a response.
Around 30% of consumers say they sought out more sales and discounts over the past year, and 26% say they began switching to cheaper brands. The latter number is up from 20% who said the same when the survey last asked this question in May 2024. Around 26% say they made little or no change to their grocery shopping in response to the rising cost of food.
โAs we approach warm spring weather with eager anticipation, we wanted to explore householdsโ plans for home food production,โ Balagtas noted. Nearly half of households (44%) say they currently produce or are planning to produce their own food, with vegetable and fruit gardening as the most popular (82%) production activity.
โOne-third of households that produce their own food have or plan to have egg-laying hens,โ he said. โWith the ongoing egg shortage caused by avian flu, administering this question in future months could give us insight into whether more consumers are turning to producing their own eggs to fulfill their demand.โ
Among those producing their own food, few raise livestock for meat or milk (15%) or maintain beehives for honey. Many of these methods of home food production typically require a large up-front investment, time, knowledge and resources. Over 40% of rural households selected food security and preparedness as a primary reason for producing their own food compared to only (20%) of urban households.
CFDAS economists have yet to observe a substantial change in the sustainable food purchasing index over time. This shows that consumersโ purchasing decisions seem to be unwavering about the core components that make up a sustainable diet, said Elijah Bryant, a survey research analyst at CFDAS and a co-author of the report.
โMost consumers focus on buying enough foods that satisfy their taste preferences at an affordable price. Fewer consumers are making intentional purchasing decisions that align with environmental and social sustainability,โ Bryant said.
The overall American diet quality remains unchanged from last month. Americans continue to score at the low end of the โintermediateโ diet classification. โAs the landscape of nutrition and health changes, will consumers change with it? Our data say that consumers will continue to follow their taste buds and wallets first.โ
Average weekly household spending is around $20 higher among urban households compared to rural households. The main difference between consumers in these areas is the amount of money spent on food away from home.
Purdue University Agricultural Communications
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