|
|
|
AVAILABLE NOW
(work is completed now on the 1993-95 balances
This publication includes, in addition to the
food balance sheets for individual countries, tables showing
longterm series of per caput food supplies, by major food
groups, in terms of product weight, calories, protein and
fat.
Food balance sheets: what they are and how to
use them
|
 |
(BACKGROUND INFORMATION)
A food balance sheet presents a comprehensive picture
of the pattern of a country's food supply during a specified reference
period. The food balance sheet shows for each food item i.e. each
primary commodity and a number of processed commodities potentially
available for human consumption the sources of supply and its utilization.
The total quantity of foodstuffs produced in a country added to
the total quantity imported and adjusted to any change in stocks
that may have occurred since the beginning of the reference period
gives the supply available during that period. On the utilization
side a distinction is made between the quantities exported, fed
to livestock, used for seed, put to manufacture for food use and
other uses, losses during storage and transportation, and food supplies
available for human consumption. The per caput supply of each such
food item available for human consumption is then obtained by dividing
the respective quantity by the related data on the population actually
partaking of it. Data on per caput food supplies are expressed in
terms of quantity and by applying appropriate food composition factors
for all primary and processed products also in terms of caloric
value and protein and fat content.
Annual food balance sheets tabulated regularly over
a period of years will show the trends in the overall national food
supply, disclose changes that may have taken place in the types
of food consumed, i.e. the pattern of the diet, and reveal the extent
to which the food supply of the country, as a whole, is adequate
in relation to nutritional requirements.
By bringing together the larger part of the food
and agricultural data in each country, food balance sheets also
serve in the detailed examination and appraisal of the food and
agricultural situation in a country. A comparison of the quantities
of food available for human consumption with those imported will
indicate the extent to which a country depends upon imports (import
dependency ratio). The amount of food crops used for feeding livestock
in relation to total crop production indicates the degree to which
primary food resources are used to produce animal feed which is
useful to know when analysing livestock policies or patterns of
agriculture. Data on per caput food supplies serve as a major element
for the projection of food demand, together with other elements,
such as income elasticity coefficients, projections of private consumption
expenditure and of population.
It is important to note that the quantities of food
available for human consumption, as estimated in the food balance
sheet, relate simply to the quantities of food reaching the consumer.
However, the amount of food actually consumed may
be lower than the quantity shown in the food balance sheet depending
on the degree of losses of edible food and nutrients in the household,
e.g. during storage, in preparation and cooking (which affect vitamins
and minerals to a greater extent than they do calories, protein
and fat), as platewaste or quantities fed to domestic animals and
pets, or thrown away.
Food balance sheets do not give any indication of
the differences that may exist in the diet consumed by different
population groups, e.g. different socioeconomic groups, ecological
zones and geographical areas within a country; neither do they provide
information on seasonal variations in the total food supply. To
obtain a complete picture, food consumption surveys showing the
distribution of the national food supply at various times of the
year among different groups of the population should be conducted.
Accuracy of food balance sheets.
The accuracy of food balance sheets, which are in essence derived
statistics, is of course dependent on the reliability of the underlying
basic statistics of population, supply and utilization of foods
and of their nutritive value. These vary a great deal between countries,
both in terms of coverage as well as in accuracy. In fact, there
are many gaps particularly in the statistics of utilization for
nonfood purposes, such as feed, seed and manufacture, as well as
in those of farm, commercial and even government stocks. To overcome
the former difficulty, estimates were prepared in FAO while the
effect of the absence of statistics on stocks is considered to be
reduced by preparing the food balance sheets as an average for a
threeyear period. But even the production and trade statistics on
which the accuracy of food balance sheets depends most are, in many
cases, subject to improvement through the organization of appropriate
statistical field surveys. Furthermore, there are very few surveys
so far known on which to base sound figures for waste, and in some
cases also these are subject to significant margins of error. In
most cases, the assumptions for waste used in food balance sheets
are based on expert opinion obtained in the countries. The available
statistics being what they are, considerable use had to be made
in the preparation of the food balance sheets of evaluation techniques
provided by consistency checks. Internal consistency checks are
inherent in the accounting technique of the food balance sheet itself.
Even more important are external consistency checks based on related
supplementary information, such as the results of surveys conducted
in various parts of the world as well as relevant technical, nutritional
and economic expertise. It is believed that the food balance sheets
so prepared, while often being far from satisfactory in the proper
statistical sense, provide an approximate picture of the overall
food situation in the countries which may be used for economic and
nutritional studies, the preparation of development plans and the
formulation of related projects, as in fact is being done in the
FAO.
Concepts and definitions used in food balance sheets.
Commodity coverage.
As already indicated, all potentially edible commodities should,
in principle, be taken into account in preparing food balance sheets
regardless of whether they are actually eaten or used for nonfood
purposes. The commodity list in this publication has been generally
confined to primary commodities except for sugar, oils and fats
and beverages. Whenever possible trade in processed commodities
is expressed in the originating primary commodity equivalent. A
list of commodities and their classification into major food groups,
prepared by FAO for food balance sheet purposes, is shown at the
end of this Note.
Supply and utilization elements.
Production. In principle, production figures relate to the total
domestic production whether inside or outside the agricultural sector,
i.e. it includes noncommercial production and production from kitchen
gardens. Unless otherwise indicated, production is reported at the
farm level for crop and livestock products (i.e. in the case of
crops, excluding harvesting losses) and in terms of live weight
for fish items (i.e. the actual exwater weight at the time of the
catch). As a general rule, all data on meat are expressed in terms
of carcass weight.
Imports.
In principle, this covers all movements into the country of the
commodity in question. It includes commercial trade, food aid granted
on specific terms, donated quantities and estimates of unrecorded
trade. As a general rule, figures are reported in terms of net weight,
i.e. excluding the weight of the container.
Stock changes.
In principle, this heading comprises changes in stocks occurring
during the reference period at all levels between the production
and the retail levels, i.e. it comprises changes in government stocks,
in stocks with manufacturers, importers, exporters, other wholesale
and retail merchants, transport and storage enterprises and in stocks
on farms. In actual fact, however, the information available often
relates only to stocks held by governments and even these are not
available for a number of countries and important commodities. For
this reason food balance sheets are usually prepared as an average
of several years since this is believed to reduce the degree of
inaccuracy contributed by the absence of information on stocks.
In the absence of information on opening and closing stocks changes
in stocks are also used for shifting production from the calendar
year in which it is harvested to the year in which it is consumed.
Net decreases in stocks are generally indicated by the sign "".
No sign denotes net increases.
Exports.
In principle, this covers all movements out of the country of the
commodity in question during the reference period. Remarks made
above under Imports apply by analogy.
Domestic supply.
There are various ways of defining supply and, in fact, various
concepts are in use. The elements involved are production, imports,
exports and changes in stocks (increases or decreases). There is
no doubt that production, imports and decreases in stocks are genuine
supply elements. Exports and increases in stocks might, however,
be considered as utilization elements. Accordingly, the following
are possible ways of defining supply: Production + imports + decrease
in stocks = total supply Production + imports + changes in stocks
(decrease or increase) = supply available for export and domestic
utilization Production + imports exports + changes in stocks (decrease
or increase) = supply for domestic utilization. This concept is
used also in this document.
Feed.
This comprises the amounts of the commodity in question and of edible
commodities derived therefrom not shown separately in the food balance
sheet fed to livestock during the reference period, whether domestically
produced or imported.
Seed.
In principle, this comprises all amounts of the commodity in question
used during the reference period for reproductive purposes, such
as seed, sugar cane planted, eggs for hatching and fish for bait,
whether domestically produced or imported. Whenever official data
were not available, seed figures have been estimated either as a
percentage of supply (e.g. eggs for hatching) or by multiplying
a seed rate with the area under the crop of the subsequent year.
In those cases where part of the crop is harvested green (e.g. cereals
for direct feed or silage, green peas, green beans), account has
been taken of the area under the crop harvested green.
Food manufacture.
The amounts of the commodity in question used during the reference
period for manufacture of processed commodities which could not
be converted back to their originating primary commodities or which
are part of a separate food group (e.g. sugar, fats and oils, alcoholic
beverages) are shown here. The processed products do not always
appear in the same food group. While oilseeds are shown under Oilcrops,
the respective oil is shown under the group Vegetable oils; similarly,
butter is under Animal fats and not under Milk.
Waste and other uses.
Waste comprises the amounts of the commodity in question and of
the commodities derived therefrom not further pursued in the food
balance sheet, lost through waste at all stages between the level
at which production is recorded and the household, i.e. waste in
processing, storage and transportation. Losses occurring before
and during harvest are excluded. Waste from both edible and inedible
parts of the commodity occurring in the household is also excluded.
Technical losses occurring during the transformation of primary
commodities into processed products are taken into account in the
assessment of respective extraction/conversion rates. Other uses
comprise quantities of commodities used for manufacture for nonfood
purposes, e.g. oil for soap, and statistical discrepancies. In order
not to distort the picture of the national food pattern, quantities
of the commodities in question, consumed mainly by tourists, are
included here (see also Per caput supply).
Food.
This comprises the amounts of the commodity in question and of any
commodity derived therefrom not further pursued in the food balance
sheet, available for human consumption during the reference period.
Food from maize, for example, comprises the amount of maize, maize
meal and any other products derived therefrom available for human
consumption. Food from milk relates to the amounts of milk as such,
as well as the fresh milk equivalent of dairy products, except butter.
Per caput supply.
The columns under this heading give estimates of per caput food
supplies available for human consumption during the reference period
in terms of quantity, caloric value and protein and fat content.
Calorie supplies are reported in kilocalories. The traditional unit
of calories is being retained for the time being until the proposed
kilojoule gains wider acceptance and understanding (1 calorie =
4.19 kilojoules). Per caput supplies in terms of product weight
are derived from the total supplies available for human consumption
(i.e. Food) by dividing the quantities of Food by the total population
actually partaking of the food supplies during the reference period,
i.e. the present inarea (de facto) population within the present
geographical boundaries of the country. In other words, nationals
living abroad during the reference period are excluded, but foreigners
living in the country are included. Adjustments are made wherever
possible for parttime presence or absence, such as temporary migrants,
tourists and refugees supported by special schemes (if it has not
been possible to allow for the amounts provided by such schemes
under imports). In almost all cases, the population figures used
are the midyear estimates published by the United Nations Population
Division. Per caput supply figures shown in the food balance sheets
therefore represent only the average supply available for the population
as a whole and do not necessarily indicate what is actually consumed
by individuals. Even if they are taken as approximation to per caput
consumption, it is important to bear in mind that there could be
considerable variation in consumption between individuals. In many
cases commodities are not consumed in the primary form in which
they are presented in the standardized food balance sheet, e.g.
cereals enter the household mainly in processed form like flour,
meal, husked or milled rice. To take this fact into account, the
caloric value and the protein and fat content shown against primary
commodities in the food balance sheets have been derived by applying
the appropriate food composition factors to the quantities of the
processed commodities and not by multiplying the quantities shown
in the food balance sheet with the food composition factors relating
to primary commodities. For calories, protein and fat, a grand total
and its breakdown into components of vegetable and animal origin
are shown at the beginning of each food balance sheet. In addition,
subtotals are shown for the various commodity groups.
You can place your order for Yearbooks electronically
and find out more
from Sales and Distribution
|