The study got me curious, so I did some more quick digging.
That lead me to looking around on the US government website, and found some info about food availability and consumption.
http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/cats/health_nutrition/food_consumption_and_nutrition.html
In regards to food availability, in the 1970s, the average was 3200 calories per person, per day. In 2006 it was 3900. Is it more now? Wouldn't surprise me.
The consumption trends I find interesting.
http://www.census.gov/compendia/statab/2012/tables/12s0217.pdf People are consuming less red meat and eggs, but more poultry, so the total amount of protein people consume has been pretty stable from 1980 to 2009, with a slight decrease.
The consumption of almost everything else has gone up. Comparing 2009 to 1980, the average American eats about 15 more pounds of cheese, 20 more pounds of fat and oils (mostly in salad and cooking oils), 50 more pounds of wheat and cereals, and 30 more pounds of high fructose corn syrup, (this may not be quite as alarming as the others, and cane and beet sugar consumption has dropped by 20 pounds, but is still a 10 pound increase in sugars) every year.
For some reason the increase in carb intake claimed in the study (10-14%) is significantly lower than the increase claimed by the US government. Granted, the government source I found was from 1980, not 1971, but it doesn't make sense that there would be a smaller increase in a 40 year span than 30 years.
What I don't understand is why the study claims that fat intake has gone down, while the government claims it's gone up. Unless the study is talking about fat from animal/meat sources, which would make sense with the decline of red meat and the rise of poultry. But I didn't see mention of cooking oil in the summary of the study, and I'm too cheap to pay for it to read through.
Both the study and the government numbers showed increased consumption over the last few decades, but the government estimates are higher. The governmental numbers don't seem to take into account waste at home, but rather go by what was purchased. Even still, there is a difference. But waste would account for the discrepancy? That would be a lot.