Socio-Economic Status and the Structural Change of Dietary Intake in Hungary
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Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Economics and Business
Abstract
Typically, big changes in the economic system lead to alterations
on families’ disposable income and thus on their spending for different
types of products, including food. These may imply in the long run a
structural modi cation of the population’s diet quality. After the fall of the
socialist system, in the past two decades, Central and Eastern European
countries, including Hungary, went through a profound and sometimes
dif cult transition of their political and economic systems, shifting from a
centralized plan to an open-market economy, and, perhaps more importantly,
the European Union integration. Economic change in lower-income and
transitional economies of the world appears to coincide with increasing
rapid social change. With respect to nutrition, there is evidence that these
countries are changing their diets and that changes seem to happen at a faster
pace than ever before (e.g. Ivanova et al., 2006). In this paper, we analyse
the evolution of Hungarian dietary patterns based on socio-economic status
(SES) data between 1993 and 2007. Data allows defining and profiling
several clusters based on aggregated consumption data, and then inspecting
the in uence of SES variables using OLS and multinomial logit estimations.
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Citation
Bakucs, Z., Fertő, I., & Marreiros, C. G. (2014). Socio-Economic Status and the Structural Change of Dietary Intake in Hungary. Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Economics and Business, 2(1), 5-19.