A continuation from the post
Travel Economics: The Big Picture.
In our travel spreadsheet we had three categories for food:
- Groceries/Water
- Street Food/Snacks
- Restaurant
The first category is fairly straight forward - any non prepared food or water. The second and third categories overlapped a bit. Here are a couple of examples:
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Street Snack: Vendor cart full of sesame seed buns - Istanbul, Turkey |
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Restaurant: Indoor seating, menu, non-disposable cutlery - Jalgaon, India |
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Street Food: Sold from a cart, no seating - Hyderabad, India |
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The gray area: A couple of picnic tables next to a grocery store, no menu - Yakalla, Sri Lanka |
Now, that that's been cleared up here's the graph you've been waiting for:
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* Average does not include China **As I was solo in China, I doubled my food expenses for comparison |
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The fallibility of bar graphs is that they fail to relate extenuating circumstances. Here are a few considerations:
- Greece: Mostly stationary and had ready access to kitchen facilities
- Georgia: Mostly stationary; Most food was provided by host family
- Sri Lanka: Mostly stationary; Most food was provided by DDC
- Vietnam: Stationary for two out of four weeks; Low cost meals provided by Friendship Village
In the other countries we led a more general backpacker/tourist lifestyle, usually moving on every three or four days. We also spent from two weeks to over a month in each country.
I really found food spending ratio shift interesting. In Greece we purchased mostly groceries. In Turkey, street food/snacks overtook groceries and both overshadowed restaurant spending. After Turkey, as we eased through the developing world, the ratios all fell into a similar pattern with restaurants forming the bulk of food spending. Jean and I quickly discovered that as a foreigner in India and southeast Asia, it seemed more economical (and appealing to the palate) to have someone else make our food.
I attribute the spike in Cambodia to a Mexican food restaurant in Siem Reap that we visited seven days in row. Bills here including drinks, starters and desserts would sometimes push close the $20 mark. It was quite shocking at the time but even so we considered it well worth it.
Comments
But do also note that groceries also includes, soap, shampoo etc.