Litcius/Paper detail

Geographical indication labelling of food and behavioural intentions

Nai‐Hua Chen

2021British Food Journal21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Purpose This paper aims to explore how consumer's purchase intentions and word-of-mouth (WOM) intentions of local tea are influenced by the signal effects of geographical indication labelling (GIL) on the basis of theory of reasoned action and social identity theory. Design/methodology/approach This study has developed a structural equation model (SEM) to explain the effects of consumer's attitudes, social norms and social identities on behavioural intentions, considering purchase of foods with geographical indication labels. This study collected responses from 318 consumers of tea in Taiwan. Findings Three main results are reported: (1) the prevention-focused benefit, which is a risk-aversion consideration, and the promotion-focused benefit, which is a taste and joy of quality, have higher influence compared to perceived concerns (price) on attitude towards GIL produce. (2) Compared to subjective norms, consumer attitude affects purchase intention more, yet the effects are opposite when they influence the WOM intentions. (3) Global identity impacts purchase intentions but not WOM intentions, whereas local identity influences both intentions. Originality/value Findings indicate attitude, social influence and social identity play critical roles in affecting consumer behavioural intentions. Global identity and local identity play different roles in purchase intention and WOM intentions.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyPromotion (chess)Social identity theoryTasteOriginalitySocial psychologyStructural equation modelingValue (mathematics)Identity (music)Theory of reasoned actionWord of mouthConsumer behaviourMarketingAdvertisingBusinessSocial groupPolitical scienceCreativityLawAcousticsMachine learningStatisticsPoliticsPhysicsComputer scienceMathematicsNeuroscienceOrganic Food and AgricultureConsumer Behavior in Brand Consumption and IdentificationWine Industry and Tourism