That Wikipedia page is odd: in the table of shows Mexico as 19%, and in the Mexican section (below the table) it has 8%, and groups Mexico with Central America.
As a Mexican, even 8% feels high! It is damn hard to find meat free food in most restaurants.
If you know a more reliable source for Mexico, it would be great if you could correct that incorrect article. I just stumbled across Germany not being listed in the original post as I know from several sources that there are +/- 10% vegetarians here.
I’m afraid I don’t have a reliable source of information other than what I can see on the street. Anecdotally it is hard to find pescatarian or vegetarian dishes in many restaurants. If nearly 20% of the population was vegetarian, this wouldn’t be the case.
As a fellow Mexican, 19% is too damn high, even for a vegetarian diet. That would mean that each family has at least one vegetarian/vegan member, which might be true only if we count families in the widest sense possible, in big cities. Then again, 19% is far from reality.
EDIT: Yeah, it’s a weird table indeed. 12% of Argentinian people are vegan? Well, says the UVA, a vegan organization, based on an unpublished study paid by them. In the case of Mexico, says Nielsen, based on a study of 30,000 internet users from 63 countries in 2016, which explains the skewed results but not the ample difference between Mexico and the average of the region. Also, seems like the most convenient result for vegans, not the most up-to-date.
That Wikipedia page is odd: in the table of shows Mexico as 19%, and in the Mexican section (below the table) it has 8%, and groups Mexico with Central America.
As a Mexican, even 8% feels high! It is damn hard to find meat free food in most restaurants.
If you know a more reliable source for Mexico, it would be great if you could correct that incorrect article. I just stumbled across Germany not being listed in the original post as I know from several sources that there are +/- 10% vegetarians here.
I’m afraid I don’t have a reliable source of information other than what I can see on the street. Anecdotally it is hard to find pescatarian or vegetarian dishes in many restaurants. If nearly 20% of the population was vegetarian, this wouldn’t be the case.
As a fellow Mexican, 19% is too damn high, even for a vegetarian diet. That would mean that each family has at least one vegetarian/vegan member, which might be true only if we count families in the widest sense possible, in big cities. Then again, 19% is far from reality.
EDIT: Yeah, it’s a weird table indeed. 12% of Argentinian people are vegan? Well, says the UVA, a vegan organization, based on an unpublished study paid by them. In the case of Mexico, says Nielsen, based on a study of 30,000 internet users from 63 countries in 2016, which explains the skewed results but not the ample difference between Mexico and the average of the region. Also, seems like the most convenient result for vegans, not the most up-to-date.