The Food Standards Agency have now published the latest findings of their COVID-19 Consumer Tracker.
This monthly tracker monitors attitudes, experiences and behaviours of consumers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland in relation to food during the COVID-19 pandemic
Key findings include:
Food insecurity
Concerns about food availability, food affordability and skipping meals for financial reasons were high in April 2020 but declined significantly in August 2020. They have since risen again to their current level in March 2021.
The proportion of respondents who reported use of food banks or charities also dropped in August 2020. Otherwise, this proportion has remained relatively stable across all waves.
Participants from larger households (4+), those in younger age groups (aged 16-24), and households with a child present were more likely to be ‘food insecure’, across all these measures of food insecurity.
Food purchasing, nutrition and food safety behaviours
Trends in food purchasing, eating, food safety and hygiene behaviours in the home have remained stable. They are consistent since the tracker began in April 2020.
Consumer food concerns
28% of respondents reported being concerned about the quality of food produced in the UK in March 2021, whilst 50% reported being ‘concerned’ about the quality of food imported from outside the UK. These were consistent across all collected waves.
In March 2021, 22% of participants reported having a concern about the food they eat at the moment. The biggest concerns selected by participants were:
- the ‘healthiness’ of food in my diet (53%)
- animal welfare (52%)
- the ethical treatment of producers and farmers (50%)
- food freshness (50%)
- hormones, steroids or antibiotics in food (50%)