Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results

The study investigates preference for rice quality attributes among Liberian consumers and seeks to understand their valuation of biofortified rice. It employs cross-sectional data obtained from a July 2024 survey of 543 randomly selected consumers from the counties of Bong, Lafia, Margibi and Nimba...

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Autores principales: Twine, E., Arouna, A., Aboudou, R., Ndindeng, S.
Formato: Póster
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172540
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author Twine, E.
Arouna, A.
Aboudou, R.
Ndindeng, S.
author_browse Aboudou, R.
Arouna, A.
Ndindeng, S.
Twine, E.
author_facet Twine, E.
Arouna, A.
Aboudou, R.
Ndindeng, S.
author_sort Twine, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The study investigates preference for rice quality attributes among Liberian consumers and seeks to understand their valuation of biofortified rice. It employs cross-sectional data obtained from a July 2024 survey of 543 randomly selected consumers from the counties of Bong, Lafia, Margibi and Nimba. Preliminary results indicate that the most important quality characteristics are stickiness (as reported by 23% of respondents), slow digestibility (15%), hard grain (13%), fine grain (11%), swelling capacity (11%), non-sticky when cooked (7%) and doughy (7%). On price - quality tradeoff, most households (59%) consider good quality to be more important than price/affordability (41%). 54% of households consume both local and imported rice, while 46% consume only imported rice. The most popular type of rice is parboiled imported rice (95%), followed by non-parboiled local rice (17%), and parboiled local rice (11%). The most important factors by which imported rice is recognized are price (40%), cleanliness (25%) and branding (23%). 59% of households prefer imported rice to local rice. Preference for imported over local rice is because of the former’s cleanliness (80%), superior taste (68%), greater swelling capacity (61%), aroma (53%), ease of cooking (53%), long grains (48%) and fine grains (41%). Nearly all households are unaware of biofortified crops including rice. However, given knowledge of biofortified crops, 91% of households would buy it if available on the market. Households would pay on average US$ 1.13/kg of milled biofortified rice (cf. current national average of US$ 0.8/kg). Implications for breeding and competitiveness of local rice are discussed.
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spelling CGSpace1725402025-01-31T02:03:40Z Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results Twine, E. Arouna, A. Aboudou, R. Ndindeng, S. market research The study investigates preference for rice quality attributes among Liberian consumers and seeks to understand their valuation of biofortified rice. It employs cross-sectional data obtained from a July 2024 survey of 543 randomly selected consumers from the counties of Bong, Lafia, Margibi and Nimba. Preliminary results indicate that the most important quality characteristics are stickiness (as reported by 23% of respondents), slow digestibility (15%), hard grain (13%), fine grain (11%), swelling capacity (11%), non-sticky when cooked (7%) and doughy (7%). On price - quality tradeoff, most households (59%) consider good quality to be more important than price/affordability (41%). 54% of households consume both local and imported rice, while 46% consume only imported rice. The most popular type of rice is parboiled imported rice (95%), followed by non-parboiled local rice (17%), and parboiled local rice (11%). The most important factors by which imported rice is recognized are price (40%), cleanliness (25%) and branding (23%). 59% of households prefer imported rice to local rice. Preference for imported over local rice is because of the former’s cleanliness (80%), superior taste (68%), greater swelling capacity (61%), aroma (53%), ease of cooking (53%), long grains (48%) and fine grains (41%). Nearly all households are unaware of biofortified crops including rice. However, given knowledge of biofortified crops, 91% of households would buy it if available on the market. Households would pay on average US$ 1.13/kg of milled biofortified rice (cf. current national average of US$ 0.8/kg). Implications for breeding and competitiveness of local rice are discussed. 2024-10 2025-01-30T15:48:53Z 2025-01-30T15:48:53Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172540 en Open Access application/pdf Twine, E., Arouna, A., Aboudou, R., Ndindeng, S. 2024. Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results. A Poster presented at the CGIAR Initiative on Market Intelligence WP1-WP2 Workshop, 14-18 October 2024, Harare, Zimbabwe.
spellingShingle market research
Twine, E.
Arouna, A.
Aboudou, R.
Ndindeng, S.
Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results
title Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results
title_full Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results
title_fullStr Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results
title_full_unstemmed Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results
title_short Consumer preferences for rice in Liberia: Some preliminary results
title_sort consumer preferences for rice in liberia some preliminary results
topic market research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/172540
work_keys_str_mv AT twinee consumerpreferencesforriceinliberiasomepreliminaryresults
AT arounaa consumerpreferencesforriceinliberiasomepreliminaryresults
AT aboudour consumerpreferencesforriceinliberiasomepreliminaryresults
AT ndindengs consumerpreferencesforriceinliberiasomepreliminaryresults