2009
DOI: 10.1002/agr.20206
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Consumer preference for production‐derived quality: analyzing perceptions of premium chicken production methods

Abstract: The authors assess consumer interest in a food product containing production-derived attributes. They use the French Label Rouge system in the Ontario chicken market as an example of a producer-controlled quality system. Conjoint analysis reveals a significant proportion of respondents value nonprice attributes; medication and housing had the highest importance scores, followed by price and brand ownership. Cluster analysis of the part-worth utilities revealed three consumer segments: price conscious consumers… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(12 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
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“…Beach and Zhen (2008) found that in Italy media coverage of HPAI outbreaks led to decreased chicken consumption for several months. Studies in China (Jin and Mu, 2012), Canada (Innes and Cranfield, 2009), and Denmark (Morkbak and Nordstrom, 2009) have used contingent valuation to measure demand for various chicken characteristics. These studies used stated‐preference methods, which can lead to inflated values (List and Gallet, 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beach and Zhen (2008) found that in Italy media coverage of HPAI outbreaks led to decreased chicken consumption for several months. Studies in China (Jin and Mu, 2012), Canada (Innes and Cranfield, 2009), and Denmark (Morkbak and Nordstrom, 2009) have used contingent valuation to measure demand for various chicken characteristics. These studies used stated‐preference methods, which can lead to inflated values (List and Gallet, 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consumers with increasing awareness of the health, social and environmental consequences of food choices may demand 'production-derived quality' attributes such as environmentally sustainable (Hobbs et al, 2006;Froehlich et al, 2009;Innes and Cranfield, 2009;Innes and Hobbs, 2011). Anderson et al (1996) showed that certifying corn as being produced with integrated pest management techniques did result in positive responses from consumers.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, despite government legislation (DEFRA, 2002) and retailer/producer efforts to assuage the negative impression of egg production and improve welfare, surveyed consumer attitudes show a lingering and deeply felt negative opinion about the quality of eggs and the welfare of laying hens. The egg is seen as a volatile product, where quality is non-negotiable and perceived by consumers as strongly associated with the conditions of production Material semiotics (Innes and Cranfield, 2009). Within the context of all of the above it is unsurprising that urban hen keeping is now one of the fastest growing hobbies in the UK.…”
Section: Urban Chickens and Anti-consumption -Managerial And Policy Imentioning
confidence: 99%