Testing and validation of a hierarchical values-attitudes model in the context of green food in China
Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics
ISSN: 1355-5855
Article publication date: 8 April 2014
Abstract
Purpose
Values-attitudes hierarchical models are quite frequent in the consumer behaviour literature. In attitudinal models specific to food produced in an environmentally friendly way (i.e. “green” food), past research evidence mainly originating in Western cultures posits that the strongest path of the model can be found among collectivistic consumer values, general environmental attitudes, and attitudes specific to green food. On the other hand, in non-Western cultures (i.e. China), green food (e.g. organic) is perceived by consumers as safer to consume. With this as point of departure, the present paper aims to examine whether attitudes towards green food in a values-attitudes model in China are determined as postulated in past Western research.
Design/methodology/approach
A “typical” (i.e. Western research evidence-based) values-attitudes hierarchical model was developed and a questionnaire comprising 34 items reflecting the conceptual model was designed. Data collection was focused on six major Chinese cities, as this is where the current changes in eating habits are predominantly taking place. Data were collected by personal interviews conducted by local researchers between January and March 2009 through a mall-intercept method. A total number of 479 respondents were recruited, equally distributed among the six cities.
Findings
Collectivistic values and environmental attitudes were still found to be strong determinants of Chinese consumers' attitudes towards green foods; contrary to relevant Western findings, however, collectivism also influenced technological attitudes; which, in turn, influenced attitudes towards green food jointly with environmental attitudes. These findings point to the conclusion that Chinese consumers, possibly guided by altruistic predispositions, see technology as a positive determinant of both food safety and environmental friendliness in food production. Empirical findings like these highlight the need for adaptation of well-substantiated models to completely customised research approaches within new globally rising environments.
Originality/value
It is still not quite clear how green food products are perceived in South-East Asian consumer cultures, as well as in other non-Western contexts. This scarcity makes the empirical examination of well-established values-attitudes hierarchies in such contexts valuable from an academic and practitioner's point of view.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
The authors gratefully acknowledge the EU financial support participation for the Integrated Projects Q-PORKCHAINS FOOD-CT-2007-036245 under the EU 6th Framework Programme (PF6).
Citation
Perrea, T., G. Grunert, K., Krystallis, A., Zhou, Y., Huang, G. and Hue, Y. (2014), "Testing and validation of a hierarchical values-attitudes model in the context of green food in China", Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics, Vol. 26 No. 2, pp. 296-314. https://doi.org/10.1108/APJML-09-2013-0106
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited