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Consumers’ Preferences for Apple Production Attributes: Results of a Choice Experiment

Ruopin Qu, Jing Chen, Wenjing Li, Shan Jin, Glyn Jones, Lynn J. Frewer

2023Foods16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Various food safety and environmental problems in China have raised consumer awareness of food safety issues and negative environmental impacts in various supply chains. This research assessed consumer preferences and willingness to pay (WTP) for food safety and ecosystem delivery attributes associated with apples, demonstrated through the application of different traceability systems. Research participants were recruited in Beijing (N = 384) and Shanghai (N = 320). Choice experiment methodology was applied. The data were analyzed using conditional logit, random parameter logit, and latent class models; the results indicated significant consumer preferences for traceability information, including in relation to lower pesticide usage and application of organic fertilizer during primary production. The results also indicated that participants in this research had a significant willingness-to-pay premium for apple products that had production information traceability, had reduced pesticide use, and were grown with organic fertilizers. The models demonstrated heterogeneous preferences among participants such that consumers could be divided into three classes: non-price-sensitive (53.5%), pesticide-sensitive (21.7%), and price-sensitive (24.8%).

Topics & Concepts

Willingness to payTraceabilityBeijingProduction (economics)Mixed logitFood safetyBusinessEnvironmental economicsAgricultural scienceMarketingLogistic regressionChinaEconomicsMathematicsFood scienceEnvironmental scienceStatisticsMicroeconomicsGeographyChemistryArchaeologyOrganic Food and AgricultureEconomic and Environmental ValuationEnvironmental Sustainability in Business
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