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Can information drive demand for safer food? Impact of brand‐specific recommendations and test results on product choice

Sarah Kariuki, Vivian Hoffmann

2021Agricultural Economics18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract As an unobservable attribute, food safety is likely to be under‐provided by markets where regulatory enforcement is weak. In such settings, stimulating consumer demand for safer food can potentially encourage market actors to invest in food safety. Through a randomized trial in Kenya, we test the impact of informing consumers about which maize flour brands are most likely to comply with the regulatory standard for aflatoxin, a carcinogenic fungal byproduct. Providing information on safer brands alone does not significantly affect consumption behavior. However, when the same information is combined with a test performed on the maize flour stocked by the household, the likelihood that a safer brand is consumed 2 months later is 76% higher than in the comparison group. Our findings suggest that providing information on the relative riskiness of substitute foods could encourage consumers to make safer choices.

Topics & Concepts

SAFERBusinessFood safetyProduct (mathematics)UnobservableMarketingEnforcementTest (biology)Consumer informationConsumption (sociology)EconomicsFood scienceSocial scienceBiologyComputer securityEconometricsPaleontologyMathematicsChemistryLawComputer scienceGeometryPolitical scienceSociologyFood Safety and HygieneOrganic Food and AgricultureEconomics of Agriculture and Food Markets
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