<description>What foods do poor people buy when they have a bit more money? What you might expect, but not as much of it as you might expect.</description>

Eat This Podcast

Jeremy Cherfas

Bennett’s Law

NOV 25, 202426 MIN
Eat This Podcast

Bennett’s Law

NOV 25, 202426 MIN

Description

Graphic illustration showing stylised images of pearl millet, rice, chicken and chickpeas, an indication of Bennett's Law

Graphic illustration of a rainbow hand holding a bag of money, symbolised by a dollar sign, from which are sprouting green leaves.For a long time people have suspected that there is a kind of logic to what people buy as they have a bit more to spend on food. First, they change from coarse grains — things like sorghum or millet — to fine grains, wheat and rice, maybe corn. Then they switch up to protein from animal-sourced foods. This logic was even considered something of a law, Bennett’s Law, after Merrill Bennett, the agricultural economist who formulated the idea in the early 1940s. But it wasn’t really a law, because no-one had actually studied income and food purchases under controlled conditions.

Now someone has, with the first empirical test of Bennett’s Law. For Marc Bellemare, the lead author, the research, “changes your view of how the world works”.

Notes

  1. Income and the Demand for Food among the Poor, by Marc F. Bellemare, Eeshani Kandpal, and Katherina Thomas can be downloaded from JSTOR.
  2. Marc Bellemare has a website where he explains difficult things clearly. You might also like to listen to his other episodes on the podcast.
  3. As it happens, just last week the USDA published a chart showing Engels’ Law at work in the US.
  4. Here’s the transcript.

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