Accepted Manuscript Amount of information and the willingness of consumers to pay for food traceability in China
Shaosheng Jin, Yan Zhang, Yining Xu PII:
S0956-7135(17)30058-0
DOI:
10.1016/j.foodcont.2017.02.012
Reference:
JFCO 5447
To appear in:
Food Control
Received Date:
12 November 2016
Revised Date:
08 February 2017
Accepted Date:
09 February 2017
Please cite this article as: Shaosheng Jin, Yan Zhang, Yining Xu, Amount of information and the willingness of consumers to pay for food traceability in China, Food Control (2017), doi: 10.1016/j. foodcont.2017.02.012
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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Highlights • Chinese consumers would prefer a food traceability system with detailed information rather than abbreviated information. • The willingness to pay (WTP) for traceability is about 10% higher with detailed information than abbreviated information. • Educational level, self-reported health, risk attitude, and other factors affected WTP by consumers. • The main concerns of Chinese consumers are quality certificates and chemical fertilizer/pesticide details.
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Amount of information and the willingness of consumers to pay for food
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traceability in China
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Shaosheng Jin a, *, Yan Zhangb, Yining Xub
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a
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University, 866 Yuhangtang Rd, Hangzhou 310058, P.R. China
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b
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University, 866 Yuhangtang Rd, Hangzhou 310058, P.R. China
China Academy for Rural Development (CARD), School of Public Affairs, Zhejiang
Department of Agricultural Economics and Management, School of Management, Zhejiang
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 *
Corresponding author. Tel.: +86 571 88981490; fax: +86 571 88981522 E-mail address:
[email protected] (S.S. Jin)
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Amount of information and the willingness of consumers to pay for food
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traceability in China
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Abstract
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There is no consensus about whether the food traceability system planned for construction in
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China or other countries should record detailed information like the beef traceability system
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in Japan, or simple abbreviated information similar to that provided in the USA. Using apple
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as a research subject, we adopted random nth price experimental auction to investigate the
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willingness to pay (WTP) for traceability based on abbreviated and detailed information
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among consumers in China. Totally 88 participants attended the experimental auction. The
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results showed that consumers had a positive WTP for both types of food traceability
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system, but the average premium that consumers were prepared to pay for traceability with
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detailed information was 10% higher than that with abbreviated information. Males, married
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subjects, and those with a relatively low educational level placed a higher premium on
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traceability with detailed information, but consumers with good self-reported health did not
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want to pay a high premium for traceability with detailed information. The results also
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showed that consumers were most interested in a food traceability system that provides
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quality certificates and details of the chemical fertilizers/pesticides used in food production.
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We discuss the implications of these results for the implementation of a food traceability
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system.
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Keywords: China, consumer, information, food traceability system, willingness to pay
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1. Introduction
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Information asymmetry often leads to increased anxiety, uncertainty, and rapidly declining
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confidence among consumers (Hobbs, 2004; Houghton et al., 2008). To restore consumer
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confidence, it is essential and effective to provide them with more food-related information
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(Golan et al., 2004; van Rijswijk & Frewer, 2012), which can be achieved via traditional food
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labels (e.g., Kehagia et al., 2007) and food traceability systems using modern technology (e.g.,
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Golan et al., 2004; Hobbs et al., 2005; Liao et al., 2011). Labeling is a conventional method for
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food information provision and it still plays an important role in communicating with consumers
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(Kehagia et al., 2007). However, the space limitations of simple paper labels restrict the amount
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of information that can be conveyed (Verbeke & Ward, 2006; Jin & Zhou, 2014). Due to
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continuous improvements in technology and devices, barcodes, radio frequency identification,
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wireless sensor networks, an electronic nose coupled with mass spectrometry, and optical
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systems are now used widely in food traceability systems (Peres et al., 2007; Chrysochou et al.,
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2009; Aung & Chang, 2014). Thus, the capacity to provide food safety and quality information
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via food traceability systems is much greater (Jin & Zhou, 2014).
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In terms of the amount of information conveyed, there are two types of food traceability
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system, which provide abbreviated information or detailed information. For example, a beef
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traceability system may provide abbreviated information, such as the beef traceability system
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employed in the USA1, which is simply a record-keeping system for controlling the supply chain,
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facilitating food safety control, differentiating the attributes of foods, and monitoring animal
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diseases (Golan et al., 2004; Schulz & Tonsor, 2010). This is a voluntary traceability system,
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which is motivated mainly by economic incentives (Souza-Monteiro & Caswell, 2004). The 1
The National Animal Identification System is a voluntary program and it is the most comprehensive system in the USA for implementing food traceability (Schroeder et al., 2009).
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second type of system provides detailed information, e.g., the Japanese beef traceability system.
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According to Jin and Zhou (2014), the Japanese Beef Traceability Law requires much more
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detailed information2, and thus the mandatory Japanese beef traceability system has more depth
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and breadth than the EU3 traceability system (Souza-Monteiro & Caswell, 2004). Therefore, the
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beef traceability systems used in the USA lag far behind those in Japan in terms of the amount of
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information provided (Smith et al., 2005).
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In practice, there are many barriers to the implementation of a food traceability system with
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detailed information, including liability among the participating producers (Breiner, 2007;
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Schulz & Tonsor, 2010), the reliability of technology (Schroeder et al., 2009; Schulz & Tonsor,
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2010), standard limitations (Bosona & Gebresenbet, 2013), and the willingness to provide
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information (Golan et al., 2004). Another major concern is the expense of providing information
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(Golan et al., 2003). Food traceability systems are expensive and complex, which could lead to
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financial problems (Bosona & Gebresenbet, 2013) because greater amounts of information and a
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more detailed traceability system will incur higher costs (Souza-Monteiro & Caswell, 2004). For
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food producers, the critical issue is who will pay the cost (Souza-Monteiro & Caswell, 2004;
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Breiner, 2007). Thus, producers do not want to provide detailed information if they have to bear
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the additional cost.
2
The full name of the Japanese Beef Traceability Law is “Law for Special Measures Concerning the Management and Relay of Information for Individual Identification of Cattle,” which was implemented to allow full traceability from farm to fork in 2004 by the National Livestock Breeding Center with the support of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries. The following information is required: individual identification number, date of birth or country of origin, sex, individual identification number of the maternal parent, location (prefecture name) of the raising facilities, start and end of breeding in the breeding facilities, date of slaughter, breed of cattle, name of the exporting country (for imported cattle), title and location of the abattoir where the cattle were slaughtered, and the country of origin (for imported cattle) (Clemens, 2003; Jin and Zhou, 2014). Excluding the information required by law, beef retailers can provide additional information voluntarily to facilitate better assurance of food safety and quality, e.g., Jusco Supermarkets (Aeon Company, Ltd) provide consumers with the story of how the meat was produced, photographs and the name of the producer on the packaging, BSE testing details, an official stamp from Aeon, etc. (Clemens, 2003). 3 The EU is a major driver in establishing global standards that are leading to the introduction of a traceability system worldwide (Souza-Monteiro & Caswell, 2004).
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Similar to many other developing countries, China is in the preliminary stages of
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implementing a food traceability system, but there is no consensus regarding the amount of
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information that should be recorded in the food traceability system. Information comes at a cost,
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so it is very important to identify the attitudes of consumers and their preferences regarding food
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traceability systems containing different amounts of traceability information. However, previous
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studies of food traceability have focused mainly on the willingness to pay (WTP) for traceability
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per se among consumers (e.g. Dickinson & Bailey, 2002; Hobbs et al., 2005; Loureiro &
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Umberger, 2007; Ubilava & Foster, 2009; Lee et al., 2011; Ortega et al., 2011; Zhang et al.,
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2012; Wu et al., 2012; Lu et al., 2016) and the results of these studies suggest that consumers
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from different countries or regions are willing to pay a premium for food with traceability
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attribute (Jin & Zhou, 2014).
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Meanwhile, attention has also been paid to food traceability systems. From the perspective
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of food industry, some studies analyzed the economic incentives/motives/benefit (e.g., Hobbs et
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al., 2005; Bosona & Gebresenbet, 2013; Aung & Chang, 2014; Menozzi et al., 2015) and barriers
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to establish food traceability systems (Bosona & Gebresenbet, 2013). Also there are some other
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studies focusing on how to develop food traceability systems (e.g., Feng et al., 2013; Hu et al.,
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2013). From the perspective of consumers, van Rijswijk et al. (2008) investigated consumers’
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perception of food traceability systems. As food traceability systems represent a good means of
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information provision, several recent studies investigated the types of traceability information
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that consumers were interested in. For example, Wu et al., (2016) investigated consumers’ WTP
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and preference rankings for different kinds of traceability information, including specific
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information related to farming, slaughter and processing, distribution and marketing, and
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government certification. Based on a national representative sample of 6243 Japanese
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consumers, Jin and Zhou (2014) reported that harvest date, production method, and production
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method certification are the items of most interest to Japanese consumers. Generally, the existing
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literature shows that easy-to-understand, quick-to-process information (van Rijswijk et al., 2008)
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and information of quality assurances (Hobbs et al., 2005) are more preferred than technical
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information of traceability (Gellynck & Verbeke, 2001).
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Despite above valuable contributions, prior researches have not assessed the premiums that
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might be paid for traceability with different amounts of information recorded by a food
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traceability system. This paper seeks to fill this gap with the following goals:
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1) To compare the WTP among Chinese consumers for traceability with abbreviated and detailed information. 2) To investigate the factors that affect the WTP premiums among consumers for traceability with abbreviated and detailed information, and 3) To identify the specific types of food safety and quality information that interest Chinese consumers.
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The remainder of this paper is organized as follows. In the next section, we describe the
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background and details of the food traceability system in China. Section 3 explains the methods
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employed and the data. The results and discussion are presented in Section 4. In Section 5, we
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give our conclusions and discuss the implications of this study.
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2. Background regarding the food traceability system in China
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China began to explore the implementation of a food traceability system in the early 2000s,
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when the Management Regulations for Animal Vaccination Identification Tag were released in
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2002, which stipulate that livestock must wear immunity ear tags and that an immunity archives
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management system should be established. However, progress in the construction of a
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traceability system has been driven mainly by food safety issues. In particular, the EU imposed 6
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mandatory traceability on imported beef, aquatic products, and vegetables in 2004 due to BSE,
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which prompted the Chinese government to enact tracing and tracking guidelines for exit aquatic
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products, beef, vegetables, and fruits in order to promote the export and exchange of agricultural
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products. In addition, two important laws, i.e., the Agricultural Product Quality Safety Law and
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Food Safety Law, both require that food enterprises establish records regarding procurement,
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production, processing, packaging, and circulation for the food supply chain. However, due to
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high costs and technical constraints, only a limited number of food categories were covered and
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the development of the food traceability system was slow before 2006 (Wu et al., 2012; Bai et
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al., 2013).
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The development of a food traceability system in China has progressed rapidly since 2007.
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The production of a Certificate and Invoice Asking System and Purchase and Sale Ledger System
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were encouraged by the State Administration for Industry and Commerce to improve the
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management of food circulation, where nine categories for 69 types of major products (45 types
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are food products) had to be implemented for mandatory electronic supervision with a code
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attached to the package. In order to further E-enable the Certificate and Invoice Asking System
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and Purchase and Sale Ledger System, and to improve the circulation and packaging of meat and
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vegetables, which are the largest components of the typical Chinese “shopping basket,” the
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Ministry of Commerce and the Ministry of Finance began to fund 10 capable cities, i.e.,
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Shanghai, Chongqing, Dalian, Qingdao, Ningbo, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Chengdu, Kunming, and
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Wuxi, as pilots to establish a food circulation traceability system in 20104. However, it is still
4
From 2011 to 2014, another four batches of 48 pilot cities were included in this program. The second batch of pilot cities (2011): Tianjin, Shijiazhuang, Harbin, Hefei, Nanchang, Jinan ( in Shandong province ), Haikou, Lanzhou, Yinchuan and Urumchi; The third batch of pilot cities (2012): Beijing, Taiyuan, Hohhot, Changchun, Zhengzhou, Changsha, Nanning, Guiyang, Xi’an, Xining, Suzhou, Wuhu, Weifang, Yichang and Mianyang; The fourth batch of pilot cities (2013): Qinhuangdao, Baotou, Shenyang, Jilin, Mudanjiang, Xuzhou, Fuzhou, Yantai, Zibo, Luohe, Xiangyang, Xiangtan, Zhongshan, Zunyi and Tianshui; The fifth batch of pilot cities (2014): Lhasa, Jinzhong, Haidong, Tongren, Shihezi, Wuzhong, Weihai and Linyi.
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difficult to identify the origins of meat and vegetables if food safety problems occur, so there is
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an urgent need to “informationize” the traceability system nationwide. This will require that the
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pilot cities implement a unified acquisition index, coding rules, transmission format, interface
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specification, and traceability procedures to ensure the smooth communication of information
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between different regions, as well as among different traceability technology modes. At the
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initial stage, large wholesaling markets, large and medium-sized supermarket chains, and
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designated mechanized slaughterhouses are the main targets. The circulation traceability system
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for meat and vegetables may serve as a successful case to drive the implementation of
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traceability systems for other agricultural products. Subsequently, China will establish
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traceability systems for tea, milk powder, aquatic products, etc., in different regions.
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The Chinese food traceability system can provide much more information after the
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implementation of the E-enabled Certificate and Invoice Asking System and Purchase and Sale
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Ledger System. However, a related controversial topic is whether the food traceability system
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under construction in China should record detailed information similar to the beef traceability
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system in Japan or simply convey abbreviated information like that in the USA to improve
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supply-side management. This is a crucial issue for China because it is still in the preliminary
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stage of implementing a food traceability system, which covers a limited number of food
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categories.
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3. Methodology and data
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3.1 Methodology
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To elicit the WTP among consumers regarding traceability using abbreviated and detailed
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information, we employed apples5 as the research subject and we conducted an experimental
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auction. Experimental auction is a kind of revealed preference method, which has advantages
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over stated preference methods such as contingent valuation method (CVM) and choice
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experiment (CE) (Alfnes & Rickertsen, 2003; Lusk et al., 2007; Bougherara & Combris, 2009).
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Involving real money and real goods, the experimental auction can create a non-hypothetical
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setting where participants have the greatest incentive to reveal their true values (Lusk, 2003), and
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sincere bidding is the weakly dominant strategy for participants (Melton et al., 1996; Shogren et
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al., 2001; Lusk & Shogren, 2007; Chern & Chang, 2012). Thus, experimental auction has been
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extensively used in estimating consumers’ WTP and preferences for new products and product
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extensions in recent years (e.g., Alfnes & Rickertsen, 2003; Lusk et al., 2007; Chern & Chang,
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2012; Corrigan et al., 2012; Wu et al., 2016).
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Specifically, this study adopted random nth price sealed-bid auction method (e.g., Shogren
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et al., 2001; Gracia et al., 2011; Lee et al., 2011; Wu et al., 2016). It shares the characteristics of
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both Becker-deGroot-Marschak (BDM) (Becker et al., 1964) and the Vickrey second price
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auction mechanism (Vickrey, 1961) that all participants have a reasonable chance of winning
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regardless of their true values (Shogren et al., 2001; Lusk et al., 2007; Lusk & Shogren, 2007). It
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works as follows: In a quiet experimental environment, each participant submitted a sealed bid
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and all bids were then ranked in descending order by their values before randomly drawing a
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number n ∈ {2, 3,...,𝑘} (where k is the number of bidders) from a uniformly distribution, where
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the n–1 highest bidders purchased a unit of the auctioned good at the randomly drawn nth price.
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Apples are a good choice for valuation experiments because of their worldwide popularity, consumer familiarity, and level of consumption, and there is little heterogeneity among experiment respondents in their understanding of this product (Costanigro et al., 2014).
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The experiment was conducted during January and February in 2013. A pre-test was
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conducted at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou to assess the understandability, content and
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length of the auction mechanism and questionnaire. A total of 15 respondents participated in the
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pre-test. Following the feedback received, we adjusted the procedure of auction and ambiguous
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expressions. During the formal auction process, the subjects were identified through random
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sampling, consumers aged 18 years and above were eligible. All of the subjects signed up
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voluntarily, and they were recruited by leaflet and on-site recruitment in Hangzhou city,
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Zhejiang Province, which is among the first batch of pilot cities implementing a food traceability
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system in China. 99 consumers signed up for the experimental auction and 88 attended finally.
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The auction design had nine sessions and each comprised 6–12 participants.
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Two treatments were designed to evaluate the preferences of consumers for the two types of
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food traceability system, i.e., in the first scenario, apples were provided with abbreviated
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information comprising “brand, producer, place of origin, size, harvest date, shelf life, storage
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instructions, and E-business website”; and in the second scenario, apples were provided with
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detailed information comprising the abbreviated information mentioned above as well as
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“contact details, pesticide residuals, logistics information, nutritional content (calories, fat,
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dietary fiber, protein, carbohydrate, carotene, vitamin A, vitamins B1, B2, and B3, vitamin C,
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vitamin E; cholesterol, retinol equivalent, K, Ca, Fe, Zn, P, Na, Mg, Mn, Cu, and Se).”
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The experiment was divided into two stages. First, a brief presentation was given to explain
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the principles and operation of the auction, before a real money practice auction was conducted
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using induced values, which is standard in evaluations of goods during experimental auctions
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(Lusk & Shogren, 2007), with a pencil to strengthen the participants’ understanding of the
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auction mechanism. Similar to the design of the actual apple auctions, each participant was
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endowed with a pencil, they were then asked to submit their sealed WTP to upgrade the endowed 10
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pencil into higher quality pencil in three consecutive rounds. The binding round was then
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determined randomly and the auction winners paid for the upgraded pencil.
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Second, a series of formal food auctions were conducted as follows. Step one: Initially, the
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experimental instructions were explained in both written and oral form. Next, a unique ID
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number, 500 g of apples with no traceability information, and 10 CNY6 were given to each
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participant. Step two: Another 500 g of apples with a barcode were provided but the other
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characteristics were the same. The barcode linked to a website with abbreviated information.
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Each subject submitted their sealed truthful WTP to upgrade the given apples to apples with
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abbreviated information. All the bids were then ranked in descending order and a random
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number n was drawn. The highest bid, lowest bid, and random nth bid (market price) were
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posted. Three additional rounds were repeated. Step three: Another 500 g of apples with a
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barcode were provided (the other characteristics were remain the same) but the barcode linked to
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detailed information, and four rounds of auction were then conducted in the same manner as step
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two. Step four: One round was randomly selected from all eight trials. The auction winner paid
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for the upgraded apples and all the participants received their participation fee. A questionnaire
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was completed after the auction to obtain information from the subjects, which was used for
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modeling their WTP.
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3.2 Data Summary statistics for the selected sample characteristics are reported in Table 1.
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[Insert Table 1 here]
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6
At the time of the auction, 1$= 6.30 CNY, and the market price for apples with no traceability information was 6 CNY/500 g.
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Approximately 63% of the participants were married and 60% were females, which is
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higher than that in China in 20137, it is reasonable considering the food buyers in China are
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mainly females. Almost 85% of the participants had a monthly household income below 11000
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CNY and 61% had a college or above degree. The monthly household income and education
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level of the sample are relatively higher than common Chinese. The majority of the participants
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self-reported their good health and about 89% of subjects were fond of apples, while 46% of the
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subjects were concerned about news regarding food safety. The risk response of consumers can
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be decoupled into risk perception and risk attitude according to Pennings et al. (2002). In terms
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of risk perception, 28.4% of the participants perceived a risk that the apples they consume may
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contain chemical residues (score < 4), 58% of the subjects did not perceive risks regarding apple
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quality and safety (score > 4), whereas the remaining 13.6% of the participants were risk
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perception neutral (score = 4). In terms of risk attitude, the average score was 3.49, which shows
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that the subjects were generally risk averse. On average, most subjects (62.5%) were risk averse
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(score < 4), about 26% of the subjects had a high willingness to accept the risk when consuming
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apples (score > 4), whereas the remaining 11.5% of the participants were risk attitude neutral
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(score = 4).
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4. Results and discussion In this section, we present our analysis of the bids under the two treatments, the factors that
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influenced WTP among consumers, and the types of information that consumers preferred.
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4.1 Comparison of WTP among consumers
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The average bids by subjects in each round are reported in Table 2. Among consumers, the
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WTP for apples with abbreviated traceability information ranged from ca 1.85 CNY to 2.22 7
According to China Statistical Yearbook 2014, the ratio of females in China was 48.76% in 2013.
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CNY, whereas the average WTP for apples with detailed traceability information was ca 2.7
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CNY. The stabilization indices for the last two rounds under the abbreviated and detailed
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traceability information treatments were 1.28 and 1.35, and 1.47 and 1.42, respectively, which
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shows that the bids tend to stabilize8.
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[Insert Table 2 here]
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The mean bids under the two treatments are reported in Table 3, where the results indicate
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that compared with ordinary apples, consumers would be prepared to pay 34.3% and 44.5%
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premiums for apples with abbreviated and detailed traceability information, respectively. This
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result agrees with that reported by Zhang et al. (2012) who found that Chinese consumers place a
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positive WTP premium on a food traceability system. Different amounts of traceability
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information influence the behavior of Chinese consumers, where the significant result of a
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simple mean equality t-test indicates that the Chinese consumers in the present study were
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sensitive to the information treatments (p < 0.01). Detailed traceability information resulted in
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higher WTP values and, on average, they were prepared to pay a 10% higher premium (about
283
0.61 CNY/500 g) for apples with detailed traceability information rather than similar apples with
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abbreviated traceability information.
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[Insert Table 3 here]
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4.2 Factors that influenced the WTP premium of consumers
8
The stabilization index was calculated by dividing the mean bid prices by the standard deviation in each round (Lee et al., 2011).
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A regression model was used to investigate how various factors affected the preferences of
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consumers for the provision of different amounts of information by a food traceability system.
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According to Costanigro et al. (2014), the differences in the WTP can be represented by the first-
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difference
293
, where the change in WTP is a = WTPdetailed ‒ WTPabbreviated WTP(detailed ‒ abbreviated) i i i
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stochastic function of the demographic and individual characteristics of subjects xi, and an error
295
term μi. The random variable ∆bid(detailed ‒ abbreviated) is the observed counterpart of ∆ i
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, where ∆bid(detailed ‒ abbreviated) , and thus = biddetailed ‒ bidabbreviated WTP(detailed ‒ abbreviated) i i i i
297
we adopted the following regression model:
298
between
the
detailed
and
abbreviated
∆bidi = β0 + β'xi + μi,
information
scenarios:
∆
μi~N(0,σ2),
299
where ∆bidi is the difference between consumer i’s bids for detailed information and
300
abbreviated information scenarios; xi is a vector of independent variables, including the
301
demographic and individual characteristics of subjects; μi is an error term, which is assumed to
302
have a normal distribution; and β' measures the partial effects of xi on E(∆bidi|xi).
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The estimated parameters for the WTP model are shown in Table 4. R-squared = 0.427 and Prob>F = 0.0000. Overall, the results appear to be reasonable.
305 306
[Insert Table 4 here]
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According to the regression results, educational level had a negative influence on the ∆bidi
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of the participants. Compared with consumer who had the lowest average educational level,
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highly educated consumers were not prepared to pay a higher premium for apples with detailed
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traceability information compared with those with abbreviated traceability information. As in the 14
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second scenario four additional types of information (i.e. nutritional content, pesticide residuals,
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contact details, logistics information) were included in the traceability system, a possible reason
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for the above result is that the highly-educated consumers already have more nutrition related
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knowledge of food products (Drichoutis, 2005; De Vriendt et al., 2009) and thus are more likely
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to show less interest in added information.
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The negative sign for self-reported health showed that the consumers with bad self-reported
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health have a higher WTP premium for apples with detailed traceability information. For the
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consumers with bad self-reported health, they pay more attention to the nutritional content and
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nutritional value of food (Drichoutis et al., 2009). As is reported in Drichoutis (2005), the
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consumers with bad self-reported health use label of nutrient content more often. Since such
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information they interested/concerned is available within detailed traceability information, the
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consumers with bad self-reported health would like to pay a higher premium for apples with
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detailed information. By comparison, the consumers with good self-reported health gave a lower
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WTP premium to apples with detailed traceability information. It is possible that the consumers
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with good self-reported health consider that food is safe provided that a food traceability system
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exists, regardless of the amount of information that it conveys.
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The response of consumers to the risk related to food is likely to shape their likelihood of
329
purchasing food and their WTP for food (Pennings et al., 2002). In the present study, we also
330
found that both the risk perception and risk attitude significantly affected the WTP for food
331
among consumers, which is similar to the results obtained by de Jonge et al. (2008) and Lim et
332
al. (2014). The negative sign for risk perception indicates that consumers who perceived a risk
333
would not like to pay a higher premium for apples with detailed traceability information
334
compared with the consumers who did not perceive a risk. For consumers with higher level of
335
risk perception, they were more likely to have less confidence in the fruit quality, and would not
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like to pay a higher WTP premium to apples with detailed traceability information. In addition,
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the positive sign for risk attitude means that consumers with a higher willingness to accept the
338
risks of eating apples will have a higher WTP for apples with detailed traceability information.
339
As risk attitude captures consumers’ willingness to consume fruits across different risky
340
situations (Schroeder et al., 2007), risk tolerance consumers will not reduce the consumption of
341
fruits even if there is a potential risk. Our result shows that risk tolerance consumers would like
342
to pay more for apples with detailed traceability information than risk averse consumers,
343
probably because the detailed traceability information helps in purchase decision and thus reduce
344
uncertainty.
345
4.3 Demand for specific food safety and quality information
346
The value of a food traceability system depends critically on the information that it conveys
347
(Aung & Chang, 2014), so the type of food safety and quality information recorded are also
348
important for the development of a food traceability system. In our study, the respondents were
349
also asked to rank their preferences for eight different types of food safety and quality
350
information (quality certificate, chemical fertilizers and pesticides used in production processes,
351
harvest date, production standards, nutrition, place of origin, producer, and circulation process),
352
and the statistical result is shown in Figure 1.
353 354
[insert Figure 1 here]
355 356
Among the eight types of information, “quality certificate” was most important and only
357
5.68% consumers were not interested in this information. A quality certificate is a readily
358
interpretable indicator of quality and it is easy to process (Hobbs et al., 2005; van Rijswijk et al.,
359
2008). The second type of information preferred by respondents (91%) was “chemical fertilizers 16
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 360
and pesticides used in production processes.” This is probably because China ranks among the
361
highest users of fertilizer (Calvin et al., 2006) and pesticides (Fang & Zhu, 2014), thereby
362
resulting in excessive residues in the harvested product, which is one of the main reasons for
363
enhancing food safety in China (Fang & Zhu, 2014). The “harvest date” and “production
364
standards” both ranked third (86.36%) in the list of preferences. The four main types of
365
information differ slightly from those reported by Jin and Zhou (2014) based on a study in Japan,
366
where they found that the harvest date, production method, certification of production method,
367
and pesticides (drug) used in production were the four main types of information preferred by
368
Japanese consumers.
369
As shown in Figure 1, “nutrition” (73%), “place of origin” (64%), “producer” (52%), and
370
“circulation process” (51%) were the four main types of information that consumers did not
371
prefer. Nutrition knowledge is not as popular as easily understandable information such as
372
quality certificate, harvest date, etc. probably because most Chinese consumers have low levels
373
of nutrition knowledge. Liu et al. (2015) stated that up to date there is no educational campaign
374
to promote nutrition knowledge neither nationally nor regionally in China, most consumers
375
cannot understand scientific nutrition information well.
376 377
5. Conclusion and implications
378
Food traceability systems were originally designed to facilitate food supply chain
379
management, but they can also provide an effective medium for information provision. At
380
present, there is no consensus regarding whether a food traceability system should record
381
detailed information or simply convey abbreviated information. Cost is one of the main barriers
382
to information provision but it is very important to understand the attitudes and preference of
383
consumers regarding food traceability systems that provide different amounts of food traceability 17
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 384
information. In this study, we determined the premiums that consumers are prepared to pay for
385
food traceability systems with different amounts of traceability information in China. Our results
386
have many implications for China and other countries regarding the implementation of a
387
traceability system.
388
Chinese consumers had a positive WTP for traceability with both abbreviated and detailed
389
information, but the WTP for traceability with detailed information (average premium of 44.5%)
390
was higher than that for traceability with abbreviated information (average premium of 34.3%),
391
where the difference in the premiums was about 10% (0.61 CNY/500 g). The size of the
392
premium and the difference between the premiums can provide a reference for pricing produce
393
with different amounts of traceability information.
394
In terms of the factors that affected WTP among consumers, consumers with good self-
395
reported health and highly educated consumers were not prepared to pay a higher premium for
396
traceability with detailed information. The behavior of consumers is also driven by risk attitude
397
and risk perception, and we found that consumers who are risk tolerance were more likely to pay
398
a higher premium, whereas those who perceived risk were less likely to pay for traceability with
399
detailed information. These results suggest that consumers with different social demographic
400
characteristics differed in their preference for the amount of information provided. Thus, social
401
demographic characteristics and market segmentation should be considered when deciding the
402
amount of information recorded in a food traceability system. If the products introduced into a
403
market are mainly targeted at those with poor self-reported health, a low educational level, and
404
who are not averse to risk, then a food traceability system with detailed information is preferable
405
according to our results.
406
In terms of specific information, our results showed that the most popular information
407
among Chinese consumers was a “quality certificate,” followed by details of the “chemical
18
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 408
fertilizers and pesticides” used in the food production process, as well as the “harvest date.” By
409
contrast, information about the food producer and food circulation was the least preferred. The
410
information recorded by a food traceability system should meet consumer demands (Verbeke,
411
2005; Karipidis et al., 2009) because it can significantly affect perceptions of food that
412
consumers eat (Dickinson & Bailey, 2002). Our results may provide an appropriate reference for
413
policy makers and food industry stakeholders when deciding the types of information that should
414
be recorded by a food traceability system. Under the constraint of a limited cost budget, a quality
415
certificate is the most important information, followed by details of fertilizers/pesticides.
416
This study is subject to some limitations. First, we focus on citizens of Hangzhou, which
417
puts limits to generalize the findings to Chinese population. A more representative sample for
418
China is expected in future study. Second, our study differentiates food traceability system by
419
amount of information, and the results suggest that most Chinese consumers are willing to pay
420
for traceability with detailed information recorded by a food traceability system, but we do not
421
mean that the more information provided in the food traceability systems the better. Considering
422
the time constraints and information processing capacity of consumers, excess information may
423
prevent consumers from making optimal choices (Teisl & Roe, 1998; Salaün & Flores, 2001),
424
the philosophy that “more information is better” runs the risk of “information overload” (Jacoby
425
et al., 1974). Therefore, it would be useful to determine the appropriate amount of information
426
for recording in a food traceability system in future research.
427 428 429 430
Acknowledgements
19
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 431
The authors would like to thank research assistant Qiyan Zeng and Yiyun Zhang for their
432
helpful support. The authors gratefully acknowledge support from the Fundamental Research
433
Funds for the Central Universities (SSEYI201102), the National Natural Science Foundation of
434
China (NNSFC-71273233, 71333011) and the Major Program of the Key Research Institute of
435
Chinese Ministry of Education (No. 15JJD790032).
436 437 438
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1
Figure Quality certificate
94.32%
Chemical fertilizers and pesticides used in production processes
90.91%
Production standards
86.36%
Harvest date
86.36% 72.73%
Nutrition
63.64%
Place of origin Producer
52.27%
Circulation process
51.14% 0%
2
Do not want to know
20%
Do not care
40%
60%
80%
100%
Always want to know
3 4 5
Fig. 1. Demand for specific safety and quality information provided by food traceability systems
6 7
1
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Tables
1
Table 1. Summary statistics based on the selected sample characteristics
2
Variables
Definition and coding
Percent
Mean
SD
Gender
0 = female; 1 = male
-
0.40
0.492
Age
Age of participant ( 18 years)
-
39.14
18.007
Marital status
0 = unmarried; 1 = married
-
0.63
0.487
Children
If the family have any children below 18 years of age: yes = 1, no = 0
-
0.38
0.487
-
-
-
-
Educational level Education
1 = Junior high school or lower
20.45%
2 = Senior high school or technical secondary school
18.18%
3 = Bachelor or college degree
47.73%
4 = Masters or above
13.64%
Household income per month (CNY) 1 = less than 5000 2 = 5000–6999
25.01% 23.86%
3 = 7000–8999
18.18%
4 = 9000–10999
18.18%
5 = 11000 and above.
14.77%
Self-reported health
1 = healthy, 0 = other
-
0.93
0.254
Preference for apples
Degree of preference for apples:1 = like, 0 = other
-
0.89
0.318
News
Concerned with news about the safety of agricultural products:
-
0.47
0.498
-
4.44
1.065
-
4.63
2.086
-
4.39
2.120
-
4.31
2.108
-
3.49
1.044
Income
Risk perception
Consumer 1 = care, 0 perception = other of food safety: 1 = Did not perceive a risk 7 = Perceived a risk At present, the fruit market is generally safe, although incidents such as excessive pesticide residual, and the illegal use of preservatives and industrial wax have occurred occasionally. At present, fruits containing chemical substances comprise a large proportion of the fruit market and they are very harmful. At present, fruits containing chemical substances do little harm to the health of consumers.
Risk attitude
Consumer attitude towards food safety: 1 = Risk aversion 7 = Risk tolerance
1
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Although I often hear about bad news such as excessive pesticide residues, and the illegal use of preservatives and industrial wax, it
-
3.71
2.295
-
3.08
2.118
-
3.67
2.159
does not affect my fruit purchasing behavior. I never worry about pesticide residues, preservatives, and industrial wax when eating fruit. I cannot tolerate the unacceptable health risk when eating fruit containing chemical substances.
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 23
Table 2. Mean bids in each round and the stabilization index for bid price Treatment
24
Abbreviated information
Detailed information
Trial
Trial
1
2
3
4
1
2
3
4
Minimum
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Maximum
6.8
6.5
6.5
6.0
9.0
8.0
8.0
8.0
Median
1.5
2.0
2.0
2.0
2.5
2.2
2.0
2.2
Mean
1.85
2.04
2.13
2.22
2.67
2.71
2.69
2.63
Standard deviation (SD)
1.43
1.40
1.66
1.64
1.72
1.80
1.84
1.85
Mean/SD
1.29
1.46
1.28
1.35
1.55
1.51
1.47
1.42
Unit: CNY, N = 88
25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 3
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 39
Table 3. Mean bids and t-test for equality of the WTP means between the information treatments
Mean
Median Standard Deviation Mean WTP Difference t-value
Abbreviated
2.06
2.0
1.537
Detailed
2.67
2.2
1.796
Information 40
0.61***
Note: *** Significant at 1% level; average price of ordinary apples sold on markets was 6 CNY/500 g.
41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 4
9.30
ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 61
Table 4. Regression results on bids ∆bid
Coefficient
Robust Std. Err.
Gender
0.244
0.269
Age
–0.009
0.013
Marital status
0.735
0.570
–0.095
0.323
-
-
–0.376
0.405
Undergraduate
–0.967**
0.445
Masters and above
–1.539***
0.523
-
-
5000–6999
–0.149
0.346
7000–8999
–0.132
0.416
9000–10999
–0.030
0.469
11000 and above
0.381
0.441
Self-reported health
–0.959*
0.510
Preference for apples
0.214
0.266
News
0.461
0.303
Risk perception
–0.219**
0.110
Risk attitude
0.248**
0.123
3.036
1.006
Children under 18 years of age Education Junior high or lower High school
Income less than 5000
Constant N = 88
F(16, 71) = 4.980
Prob > F
= 0.000
R-squared = 0.427 62
*, **, *** Significant at the 10%, 5%, and 1% levels, respectively. 5