Litcius/Paper detail

Responsible consumption: addressing individual food waste behavior

Wei-Zhi Ang, Suresh Narayanan, Meenchee Hong

2021British Food Journal32 citationsDOI

Abstract

Purpose Food wastage is a major contributor to pervasive world hunger. Cutting global food waste in half by 2030 is one of the United Nation's top priorities. Hence, this paper aims to provide useful insights on how individual behavior might be influenced to help reduce food wastage and hunger by identifying individual food waste determinants. Design/methodology/approach A total of 297 useable responses were obtained from a survey using a food diary method. A logit model was employed to estimate the relationship between leftovers and its determinants (preparedness to take own action, price conscious, food review, religiosity, health conscious, cost, marital status and gender). Findings Results show that preparedness to be responsible for one's actions, depending on food reviews and being waste conscious had a significant positive relationship with food waste reducing behavior, along with being male and being married. Research limitations/implications The study suggests that there is scope for policy initiatives to reduce the individual utility from discarding food and increase the individual utility from food saving activities. Penalizing individual or household food wastage through a tax will directly raise the cost of wastage and reduce the net utility from discarding food. Reducing food waste could help reduce global hunger. Originality/value Rationally, no one will have any intention to waste when buying food. Instead, in the context of deciding whether or not to leave leftover food, an individual is posited to weigh the potential utility from saving food or throwing it away. Thus, this study examines food waste behavior by utilizing economic tools, which is rare in the food waste literature.

Topics & Concepts

Food wasteContext (archaeology)Consumption (sociology)BusinessOriginalityMarketingPreparednessEconomicsPublic economicsPsychologyEngineeringGeographyWaste managementManagementArchaeologySocial scienceSociologyCreativitySocial psychologyFood Waste Reduction and SustainabilityMunicipal Solid Waste ManagementHalal products and consumer behavior