Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the process of supermarketization in the vegetable retail sector in China and its impact on food safety. Design/methodology/approach: Data from food safety reports by the Chinese Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) are used to investigate the degree o...

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Autores principales: Alita, Lita, Dries, Liesbeth, Oosterveer, Peter
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Emerald Publishing Limited 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171375
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author Alita, Lita
Dries, Liesbeth
Oosterveer, Peter
author_browse Alita, Lita
Dries, Liesbeth
Oosterveer, Peter
author_facet Alita, Lita
Dries, Liesbeth
Oosterveer, Peter
author_sort Alita, Lita
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the process of supermarketization in the vegetable retail sector in China and its impact on food safety. Design/methodology/approach: Data from food safety reports by the Chinese Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) are used to investigate the degree of vegetable safety in different value chain types. To assess the predictors of the degree of vegetable safety, a logistic regression model is applied. Findings: Supermarketization has led to the reorganization of the vegetables provision system, through closer coordination along the supply chain and the use of secured production bases. We identify four types of vegetable value chains in China based on their form of coordination. Supermarkets improve vegetable safety even when they rely on external suppliers, but also wet markets perform significantly better than other small-scale retailers in terms of vegetable safety. Originality/value: The study has expanded the knowledge of the supermarketization in urban China by collecting data from CFDA. Furthermore, the study used the theory of food value chain to understand determinant factors in securing food safety. Moreover, this study reveals that wet markets also have prospects in solving vegetable safety problems in China, especially in underdeveloped areas.
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spelling CGSpace1713752025-12-08T10:29:22Z Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits Alita, Lita Dries, Liesbeth Oosterveer, Peter supermarkets urban areas value chains food safety wet markets Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyze the process of supermarketization in the vegetable retail sector in China and its impact on food safety. Design/methodology/approach: Data from food safety reports by the Chinese Food and Drug Administration (CFDA) are used to investigate the degree of vegetable safety in different value chain types. To assess the predictors of the degree of vegetable safety, a logistic regression model is applied. Findings: Supermarketization has led to the reorganization of the vegetables provision system, through closer coordination along the supply chain and the use of secured production bases. We identify four types of vegetable value chains in China based on their form of coordination. Supermarkets improve vegetable safety even when they rely on external suppliers, but also wet markets perform significantly better than other small-scale retailers in terms of vegetable safety. Originality/value: The study has expanded the knowledge of the supermarketization in urban China by collecting data from CFDA. Furthermore, the study used the theory of food value chain to understand determinant factors in securing food safety. Moreover, this study reveals that wet markets also have prospects in solving vegetable safety problems in China, especially in underdeveloped areas. 2020-04-28 2025-01-29T12:58:05Z 2025-01-29T12:58:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171375 en Open Access Emerald Publishing Limited Alita, Lita; Dries, Liesbeth; and Oosterveer, Peter. 2020. Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits. British Food Journal 122(11): 3433-3449. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-08-2019-0627
spellingShingle supermarkets
urban areas
value chains
food safety
wet markets
Alita, Lita
Dries, Liesbeth
Oosterveer, Peter
Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits
title Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits
title_full Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits
title_fullStr Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits
title_full_unstemmed Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits
title_short Chemical vegetable safety in China: “Supermarketisation” and its limits
title_sort chemical vegetable safety in china supermarketisation and its limits
topic supermarkets
urban areas
value chains
food safety
wet markets
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/171375
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AT driesliesbeth chemicalvegetablesafetyinchinasupermarketisationanditslimits
AT oosterveerpeter chemicalvegetablesafetyinchinasupermarketisationanditslimits