Litcius/Paper detail

Quality risk and responsive actions in sourcing/procurement: an empirical study of food fraud cases in the UK

Jie Ma, Ying Kei Tse, Minhao Zhang, Jillian MacBryde

2022Production Planning & Control17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It is never an easy task to govern contemporary food systems and prevent contaminated foods from reaching further down the chains. This study aims to investigate how UK 
\nmanagers in food supply chains have perceived food fraud risk in their supply chain and to identify what their actions could be in response to the threat of food fraud. The study adopts the psychometric paradigm approach to measure risk perception and uses the data collected from 113 UK food practitioners to identify the determinants of their 
\nresponsive actions. The results highlight that most managers have perceived high uncertainty in the food supply chain and considered the disruption of information flow as a major concern in dealing with food fraud. Therefore, this study suggests that putting effort into practices to improve supply chain visibility and facilitate the flow of 
\ninformation are weighted as important in the food fraud mitigation journey. Policy makers should also make better use of the current quality assurance schemes for 
\nproactive food quality control and fraud prevention; government agencies should improve the risk communication systems for trustworthy information dissemination.

Topics & Concepts

BusinessSupply chainProcurementFood safetyQuality (philosophy)Food supplyFood chainGovernment (linguistics)MarketingInformation flowControl (management)Food qualityRisk analysis (engineering)Computer scienceEconomicsBiologyChemistryMedicineArtificial intelligencePaleontologyPathologyLinguisticsEpistemologyPhilosophyAgricultural economicsFood scienceFood Safety and HygieneSupply Chain Resilience and Risk ManagementIdentification and Quantification in Food