Author:
Li Chenguang,Bai Junfei,Gao Zhifeng,Fu Jiangyuan
Abstract
Purpose
Continuing economic growth in emerging markets offers large market opportunities to producers and marketers worldwide; however, market failures due to asymmetric information are often seen when high-quality products enter these “new markets” where recognition rates among consumers are low. The use of “geographical origin” labels as quality signals to overcome asymmetric information problem plays an important role. The purpose of this paper is to compare consumers’ perception and willingness to pay (WTP) for different levels of geographic origin labels to provide insights to the strategic use of origin labels in emerging markets.
Design/methodology/approach
A consumer survey on geographic labeling for imported dairy products was carried out in Beijing, China in May 2015. Under the “products of European Union (EU)” range, the authors used “product of Ireland” as a case study for the country-specific origin label. Information on consumer demographic, dairy consumption, safety perceptions, knowledge on Ireland and Irish products, as well as WTP for different geographic labeling and product attributes were collected from 307 face-to-face interviews. WTP was elicited using double-bounded contingent valuation method, and estimated with maximum log-likelihood function.
Findings
The authors found that consumers are willing to pay premium prices for both of these geographical origin indicators, but the EU label had slightly higher WTP results. However, the controversial situation is that although the EU label has a better chance than the country-specific label in signaling premium quality to Chinese consumers, EU labeling at its best signals an average quality across the EU counties. For premium products with above average quality, using generic EU labeling has a potential drawback to the establishment of product differentiation.
Originality/value
This study is the first to evaluate Chinese consumers’ WTP for EU generic origin label for dairy products in comparison to country-specific origin label. Findings of the study have immediate policy and marketing implications in emerging markets.
Subject
Food Science,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference57 articles.
1. The market for lemons: quality uncertainty and the market mechanism;Quarterly Journal of Economics,1970
2. Estimating the benefits of agri-environmental policy: econometric issues in open-ended contingent valuation studies;Journal of Environmental Planning and Management,1999
3. Consumers’ valuation of food quality labels: the case of the European geographic indication and organic farming labels;International Journal of Consumer Studies,2012
4. Bai, J. and Li, C. (2015), “Chinese consumers’ dairy consumption and purchasing habits”, ISCA research report, UCD, Dublin.
5. Elicitation and truncation effects in contingent valuation studies;Ecological Economics,1995
Cited by
15 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献