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Beggars can't be choosers: factors influencing intention to purchase organic food in pandemic with the moderating role of perceived barriers

Shafique Ur Rehman (Research Institute of Business Analytics and Supply Chain Management, College of Management, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China)
Qingyu Zhang (Research Institute of Business Analytics and Supply Chain Management, College of Management, Shenzhen University, Shenzhen, China)
Jan Kubalek (Department of Strategy, Faculty of Business Administration, Prague University of Economics and Business, Prague, Czech Republic)
Manaf Al-Okaily (School of Business, Jadara University, Irbid, Jordan)

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 31 March 2023

Issue publication date: 29 August 2023

585

Abstract

Purpose

The authors examined the impact of environmental concerns, knowledge of organic/novel food, food neophobia, food neophilia, health consciousness and social norms on satisfaction toward organic food leading to the intention to purchase organic food (IPOF). Moreover, perceived barriers are used as a moderator between satisfaction toward organic food and IPOF.

Design/methodology/approach

PLS-SEM followed and multiple regression analysis followed for hypotheses testing. Convenience sampling is used and 497 questionnaires were used for the final analysis.

Findings

Environmental concerns, knowledge of organic food, food neophilia, health consciousness, and social norms are positively related to satisfaction toward organic food leading to the IPOF. Food neophobia decreases satisfaction toward organic food. Moreover, perceived barriers are significantly moderate between satisfaction toward organic food and IPOF.

Practical implications

Organic food organizations can use the findings to increase their IPOF. Moreover, academicians and practitioners can get an advantage from study outcomes.

Originality/value

This is a pioneer study that incorporates environmental concerns, knowledge of organic food, food neophobia, food neophilia, health consciousness, social norms, satisfaction toward organic food and perceived barriers to examine IPOF in light of the theory of planned behavior (TPB).

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by Key Project of National Social Science Foundation of China (21AGL014); Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong—Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation (2021A1515011894); Guangdong 13th-Five-Year-Plan Philosophical and Social Science Fund (GD20CGL28; GD19CGL38); Shenzhen Science and Technology Program (JCYJ20210324093208022).

Citation

Rehman, S.U., Zhang, Q., Kubalek, J. and Al-Okaily, M. (2023), "Beggars can't be choosers: factors influencing intention to purchase organic food in pandemic with the moderating role of perceived barriers", British Food Journal, Vol. 125 No. 9, pp. 3249-3271. https://doi.org/10.1108/BFJ-12-2022-1095

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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