Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya

Designing interventions to support the safe development of rapidly growing livestock value chains in sub-Saharan Africa requires a clear understanding of consumer demands. This study aimed to determine purchase patterns, consumers' preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork attributes; specif...

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Autores principales: Gichuyia, Cianjo M., Mtimet, Nadhem, Fèvre, Eric M., Thomas, Lian F., Gathura, P., Onono, J.O., Akaichi, F.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139119
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author Gichuyia, Cianjo M.
Mtimet, Nadhem
Fèvre, Eric M.
Thomas, Lian F.
Gathura, P.
Onono, J.O.
Akaichi, F.
author_browse Akaichi, F.
Fèvre, Eric M.
Gathura, P.
Gichuyia, Cianjo M.
Mtimet, Nadhem
Onono, J.O.
Thomas, Lian F.
author_facet Gichuyia, Cianjo M.
Mtimet, Nadhem
Fèvre, Eric M.
Thomas, Lian F.
Gathura, P.
Onono, J.O.
Akaichi, F.
author_sort Gichuyia, Cianjo M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Designing interventions to support the safe development of rapidly growing livestock value chains in sub-Saharan Africa requires a clear understanding of consumer demands. This study aimed to determine purchase patterns, consumers' preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork attributes; specifically, the presence of a veterinary inspection stamp and the cleanliness of the butchery. A discrete choice experiment-based survey was used to investigate the purchasing behavior of 401 pork consumers: 253 buying raw pork for household consumption, and 148 buying cooked pork for out-of-home consumption. The study findings indicate that the average quantity of pork purchased by consumers was approximately 0.4 Kg per transaction, with the majority of consumers making several purchases per week. The average price per Kg of pork was KES 310 (Approx. 2.60 USD) at the time of the study. Data from the choice experiment showed that consumers were willing to pay a price premium of KES 245 (Approx. 2.1 USD) and KES 164 (Approx. 1.4 USD) per Kg for evidence of better veterinary meat inspection and higher butchery hygiene respectively; further, these were the two most important attributes they considered while making a pork purchase decision. These findings highlight the potential to leverage consumers' willingness to pay to improve the food safety within pork value chains in this context. Investing to increase consumer awareness on food safety issues should be considered to generate an effective market demand, especially in rural areas with relatively lower literacy levels.
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spelling CGSpace1391192025-10-26T12:50:43Z Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya Gichuyia, Cianjo M. Mtimet, Nadhem Fèvre, Eric M. Thomas, Lian F. Gathura, P. Onono, J.O. Akaichi, F. animal products food safety swine Designing interventions to support the safe development of rapidly growing livestock value chains in sub-Saharan Africa requires a clear understanding of consumer demands. This study aimed to determine purchase patterns, consumers' preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork attributes; specifically, the presence of a veterinary inspection stamp and the cleanliness of the butchery. A discrete choice experiment-based survey was used to investigate the purchasing behavior of 401 pork consumers: 253 buying raw pork for household consumption, and 148 buying cooked pork for out-of-home consumption. The study findings indicate that the average quantity of pork purchased by consumers was approximately 0.4 Kg per transaction, with the majority of consumers making several purchases per week. The average price per Kg of pork was KES 310 (Approx. 2.60 USD) at the time of the study. Data from the choice experiment showed that consumers were willing to pay a price premium of KES 245 (Approx. 2.1 USD) and KES 164 (Approx. 1.4 USD) per Kg for evidence of better veterinary meat inspection and higher butchery hygiene respectively; further, these were the two most important attributes they considered while making a pork purchase decision. These findings highlight the potential to leverage consumers' willingness to pay to improve the food safety within pork value chains in this context. Investing to increase consumer awareness on food safety issues should be considered to generate an effective market demand, especially in rural areas with relatively lower literacy levels. 2024-05 2024-02-09T07:48:52Z 2024-02-09T07:48:52Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139119 en Open Access Elsevier Gichuyia, C.M., Mtimet, N., Fèvre, E.M., Thomas, L., Gathura, P., Onono, J.O. and Akaichi, F. 2024. Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya. <i>Meat Science</i> 211: 109450.
spellingShingle animal products
food safety
swine
Gichuyia, Cianjo M.
Mtimet, Nadhem
Fèvre, Eric M.
Thomas, Lian F.
Gathura, P.
Onono, J.O.
Akaichi, F.
Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya
title Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya
title_full Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya
title_fullStr Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya
title_short Consumer preferences, and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural Kenya
title_sort consumer preferences and willingness to pay for safe pork products in rural kenya
topic animal products
food safety
swine
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139119
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