China: the soyabean-pork dilemma
Open Access
- 1 May 1999
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
- Vol. 58 (2) , 345-353
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0029665199000464
Abstract
In 1996 the population of China reached 1.23 billion, 22 % of the world population, and is expected to increase to 1.5 billion by 2020. As China has only 7 % of the world's arable land such population increases are likely to have an important impact on food supply in China and the world. Projections of the potential impact are discussed. The restructuring of Chinese agriculture at the end of the 1970s has led to dramatic increases in agricultural production and food consumption, in particular of animal products, fruit and vegetables. Along with these rapid changes there is evidence of a nutrition transition in which diseases associated with affluence are becoming more prevalent than deficiency diseases. This transition has led to concern about the evolving dietary pattern. The replacement of legumes, including soyabean, by meat and other animal products as rich sources of protein and other nutrients has been controversially argued on grounds of nutritional health, ecological impact, economic effects and world food supply. These arguments are reviewed and the pressures internal and external to China concerning the production and consumption of animal v. legume products are presented. It is concluded that nutritional policies to promote the consumption of soyabean are unlikely to be effective in the context of an increasingly free and global market.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diet and Bone Density Among Elderly ChineseNutrition Reviews, 2009
- The New Oxford Book of Food PlantsTaxon, 1998
- Environmental sustainability in agriculture: diet mattersEcological Economics, 1997
- Is nutrition important in osteoporosis?Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1997
- Physiological effects of phyto-oestrogens in relation to cancer and other human health risksProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1996
- The Medical Costs Attributable to Meat ConsumptionPreventive Medicine, 1995
- Social aspects of meat eatingProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1994
- Nutritional implications of a meatless dietProceedings of the Nutrition Society, 1994
- Correlations of dietary intake and blood nutrient levels with esophageal cancer mortality in ChinaNutrition and Cancer, 1990
- THE GREAT PROTEIN FIASCOThe Lancet, 1974