Consumers’ perception of quality in organic food: A random utility model under preference heterogeneity and choice correlation from rank‐orderings
Abstract
With this study we investigate the preferences of an important category of consumers of organic products (regular consumers of organic food or RCOFs) allowing for preference heterogeneity. A survey instrument was developed to elicit preferences for important qualitative and quantitative attributes of extra virgin olive oil. The survey was administered via questionnaire to a random sample of 198 RCOFs in organic food stores of Naples, Italy. The choice task was organised around a fractional factorial main effects orthogonal design. Each respondent made eight choices to rank‐order nine product profiles in terms of their individual preference. Product attributes included price, origin of production, type of certification and visual appearance. Interestingly, the set of observed responses appears to display significant preference heterogeneity for origin of production and price. Once heterogeneity and correlation among repeated choice by the same respondent are accounted for by means of random‐parameter panel logit models, the fit increases dramatically with respect to the more restrictive fixed‐parameter logit models. Results also suggest that price plays an important role as quality proxy, while visual appearance is not significant in preference modelling and the type of certification programme has a fixed effect.
Keywords
Citation
Cicia, G., Del Giudice, T. and Scarpa, R. (2002), "Consumers’ perception of quality in organic food: A random utility model under preference heterogeneity and choice correlation from rank‐orderings", British Food Journal, Vol. 104 No. 3/4/5, pp. 200-213. https://doi.org/10.1108/00070700210425660
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited