Deakin University
Browse

Working towards affordable healthy diets: a review on innovations in food price monitoring, policy and research in Australia and beyond

Version 3 2025-10-30, 01:34
Version 2 2025-09-29, 22:20
Version 1 2025-09-17, 23:12
journal contribution
posted on 2025-09-29, 22:20 authored by C Vargas, Kathryn BackholerKathryn Backholer, Rebecca BennettRebecca Bennett, R Maganti, M Lewis, Josephine MarshallJosephine Marshall, Gary SacksGary Sacks, Laura AlstonLaura Alston, Adyya GuptaAdyya Gupta, Cindy NeedhamCindy Needham, O Huse, SW Ng, Christina ZorbasChristina Zorbas
Abstract Healthy diets are unaffordable for billions of people worldwide, with food prices rising in high-, middle- and low-income nations in recent times. Despite widespread attention to this issue, recent actions taken to inform policy prioritisation and government responses to high food inflation have not been comprehensively synthesised. Our review summarises (i) innovative efforts to monitor national food and healthy diet price, ii) new policy responses adopted by governments to address food inflation and (iii) future research directions to inform new evidence. Evidence synthesis. Global. None. We describe how timely food and beverage pricing data can provide transparency in the food industry and identify key areas for intervention. However, government policies that improve food affordability are often short-lived and lack sustained commitment. Achieving meaningful impact will require long-term, cross-sectoral actions that are led by governments to support food security, healthy diets and resilient sustainable food systems. This will necessitate a better understanding of how the political economy enables (or hinders) policy implementation, including through coherent problem framing, mitigating conflicts of interest in policymaking, working together as coalitions and developing and utilising evidence on the food security and related impacts of food pricing and affordability policies. Diverse actors must be better equipped with robust data platforms and actionable policy solutions that improve the affordability of healthy and sustainable diets, including by lowering food prices and addressing the broader socio-political determinants of food insecurity.

Funding

Funder: Department of Health and Aged Care, Australian Government | Grant ID: DP210102791

History

Related Materials

Location

Cambridge, Eng.

Language

eng

Journal

Proceedings Of The Nutrition Society

Pagination

1-12

ISSN

0029-6651

eISSN

1475-2719

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Usage metrics

    Research Publications

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC