USDA: Chicken Consumption Doubled since 1970



In those 34 years, the amount of chicken that consumers ate increased from 27.4 pounds per person to 59.2 pounds of boneless, edible weight. The USDA noted that chicken is gaining ground of beef, the current leader among proteins.

The evidence is visible not only in retail but also in foodservice.

{mosimage}Chicken consumption has climbed since the 1940s, according to ERS's per capita food availability data, a widely used proxy for actual food intake. Food availability data go back to 1909 for many commodities and include all food—from grocery stores, restaurants, school cafeterias, and other eating places.

Part of the rise in chicken consumption results from the chicken industry's response to demands by consumers and foodservice operators for value-added, brand-name, and convenience products, USDA market analysts wrote. McDonald's Chicken McNuggets revolutionized chicken as both a convenience and a frozen food in the early 1980s, they said.

According to the National Chicken Council, 42% of chicken is now sold through foodservice outlets. Of this amount, 60% is sold through fast-food chains, which have introduced new lines of chicken sandwiches, salads, wraps, and tenders to meet the rising demand for chicken.

Grocery stores typically stock boneless, skinless breasts; rotisserie-cooked whole chickens; and seasoned chicken parts — all value-added products for convenience-minded shoppers. Chicken consumption has also benefited from health-related concerns about beef. By weight, chicken has less total fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol than beef, according to USDA's 2005 nutrient database.

Innovations in breeding, mass production, contract farming, vertical integration, and marketing have made chicken more plentiful and affordable. The average live weight per broiler nearly doubled to 5.35 pounds from 1934 to 2004, and it reaches that weight in less time. These supply-side changes and the expansion of the broiler industry, the USDA continued, have lowered per unit production costs.

As a result, the USDA said, the "composite" price (whole bird, breast, and leg prices, weighted by estimated quantities purchased) in 2004 dollars for a pound of chicken was $1.74 in 2004, versus $2.22 in 1980.

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