How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries

The literature regarding consumer demand for safer food in developing countries is scant, and the general assumption is that these consumers' willingness to pay (WTP, as an indicator of their demand) is constrained by their low ability to pay (ATP). There are, however, a number of developing countri...

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Autores principales: Birol, Ekin, Roy, Devesh, Torero, Máximo
Formato: Artículo preliminar
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154505
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author Birol, Ekin
Roy, Devesh
Torero, Máximo
author_browse Birol, Ekin
Roy, Devesh
Torero, Máximo
author_facet Birol, Ekin
Roy, Devesh
Torero, Máximo
author_sort Birol, Ekin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The literature regarding consumer demand for safer food in developing countries is scant, and the general assumption is that these consumers' willingness to pay (WTP, as an indicator of their demand) is constrained by their low ability to pay (ATP). There are, however, a number of developing countries with growing middle-income populations whose ATP has been steadily increasing, although low food safety standards in these countries still prevail. In this paper, we argue that ATP, while necessary, is not the sole condition for WTP and that credible information about and certification of food safety are required to ensure that ATP translates into WTP. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a randomized market experiment in two branches of a supermarket chain in Mumbai, India, a city that hosts one of the world's fastest growing middle-income populations. In this experiment, we sold grapes with credible food safety certification labels and the exact same grapes (a placebo) without such labels. We provided all consumers with extensive food safety information comprising banners and posters announcing the sale of food-safety-certified grapes in the supermarket. We also randomly selected one-half of the consumers and provided them with intensive information (a short documentation flier) describing what credible certification of food safety entails. By continuously varying the prices (with the labeled grapes priced higher than unlabeled ones) during the month in which the experiment was implemented, we found that those consumers who received intensive information (the treatment group) are more likely to purchase grapes labeled as certified. This result is robust to the inclusion of an extensive set of controls (income, gender, and education) gathered through a structured survey instrument implemented following the purchase of the grapes. To further investigate the marginal impact of credible information on consumer demand for food safety, we studied consumers' answers to various knowledge, attitude, perception, and practice (KAPP) questions also collected through the survey instrument. Using KAPP responses, we created a consumer-specific food safety consciousness index (FSCI) and stratified consumers according to those below and those above the sample mean FSCI. We find that the marginal impact of credible information and certification on the purchase of labeled grapes is significantly greater for consumers with higher FSCI. We therefore conclude that credible information and certification are important determinants of consumer demand for food safety.
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spelling CGSpace1545052025-11-06T05:55:40Z How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries Birol, Ekin Roy, Devesh Torero, Máximo attitudes certification information factor analysis food safety knowledge experimentation willingness to pay The literature regarding consumer demand for safer food in developing countries is scant, and the general assumption is that these consumers' willingness to pay (WTP, as an indicator of their demand) is constrained by their low ability to pay (ATP). There are, however, a number of developing countries with growing middle-income populations whose ATP has been steadily increasing, although low food safety standards in these countries still prevail. In this paper, we argue that ATP, while necessary, is not the sole condition for WTP and that credible information about and certification of food safety are required to ensure that ATP translates into WTP. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a randomized market experiment in two branches of a supermarket chain in Mumbai, India, a city that hosts one of the world's fastest growing middle-income populations. In this experiment, we sold grapes with credible food safety certification labels and the exact same grapes (a placebo) without such labels. We provided all consumers with extensive food safety information comprising banners and posters announcing the sale of food-safety-certified grapes in the supermarket. We also randomly selected one-half of the consumers and provided them with intensive information (a short documentation flier) describing what credible certification of food safety entails. By continuously varying the prices (with the labeled grapes priced higher than unlabeled ones) during the month in which the experiment was implemented, we found that those consumers who received intensive information (the treatment group) are more likely to purchase grapes labeled as certified. This result is robust to the inclusion of an extensive set of controls (income, gender, and education) gathered through a structured survey instrument implemented following the purchase of the grapes. To further investigate the marginal impact of credible information on consumer demand for food safety, we studied consumers' answers to various knowledge, attitude, perception, and practice (KAPP) questions also collected through the survey instrument. Using KAPP responses, we created a consumer-specific food safety consciousness index (FSCI) and stratified consumers according to those below and those above the sample mean FSCI. We find that the marginal impact of credible information and certification on the purchase of labeled grapes is significantly greater for consumers with higher FSCI. We therefore conclude that credible information and certification are important determinants of consumer demand for food safety. 2010 2024-10-01T14:01:56Z 2024-10-01T14:01:56Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154505 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.134426 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Birol, Ekin; Roy, Devesh; Torero, Máximo. 2010. How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries. IFPRI Discussion Paper 1029. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154505
spellingShingle attitudes
certification
information
factor analysis
food safety
knowledge
experimentation
willingness to pay
Birol, Ekin
Roy, Devesh
Torero, Máximo
How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
title How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
title_full How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
title_fullStr How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
title_short How safe is my food? Assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
title_sort how safe is my food assessing the effect of information and credible certification on consumer demand for food safety in developing countries
topic attitudes
certification
information
factor analysis
food safety
knowledge
experimentation
willingness to pay
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/154505
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