| Literature DB >> 35407084 |
Áron Török1, Matthew Gorton2, Ching-Hua Yeh3, Péter Czine4, Péter Balogh4.
Abstract
Geographical Indications (GIs) can increase producer margins and contribute to local economic development, but the extent to which they do so depends on the nature of consumer demand. A Discrete Choice Experiment (DCE) considers the value that consumers place on a Protected Geographical Indication (PGI) in comparison with a leading manufacturer's brand, as well as the importance of taste variations. Based on an application of DCE to sausages in Hungary, results indicate that a PGI can generate value to consumers exceeding that conveyed by the leading manufacturer's brand. Consumers' taste preferences, however, may not be consistent with the specification of GI products. Latent Class (LC) and Random parameter Latent Class (RLC) analyses identify two consumer segments, with the majority of consumers (71%-LC, 65%-RLC) classified as traditionalists, who most value the GI label, while a minority (29%-LC, 35%-RLC) is brand conscious, for whom the GI status is less salient. Both theoretical and business implications for GI marketing and club branding are drawn.Entities:
Keywords: Hungary; consumer preferences; private brand; processed meat; protected geographical indications; stated choice experiment; taste
Year: 2022 PMID: 35407084 PMCID: PMC8997744 DOI: 10.3390/foods11070997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Attributes and respective levels used in the Discrete Choice Experiment.
| Attributes and Respective Levels |
|---|
|
Sausage with no certificate Gyulai sausage PGI PICK sausage
Non-spicy Spicy Extra spicy
189 HUF (circa 0.59 EUR) 279 HUF (circa 0.87 EUR) 369 HUF (circa 1.15 EUR) 459 HUF (circa 1.43 EUR) |
* In the analysis, we applied an exchange rate of 320 HUF/EUR as an average rate at the time of data collection (summer of 2018).
Figure 1An example of a decision situation. Note: Option 1: sliced (‘Szeletelt’) sausage (‘Kolbász’), 369 HUF for a 70 g package (‘369 Ft/csomag’); Option 2: sliced Gyulai sausage (‘Gyulai kolbász’) with PGI label, spicy (‘Csípős’), 189 HUF for a 70 g package; Option 3: sliced sausage with private brand label Pick, extra spicy (‘Extra csípős’), 369 HUF for a 70 g package.
Sociodemographic characteristics of respondents.
| Sociodemographic Factors | Sample ( | Hungarian Population * |
|---|---|---|
| Gender (%) | ||
| Female | 49.47 | 52.15 |
| Male | 50.53 | 47.85 |
| Age (category) (%) | ||
| <30 | 23.16 | 32.81 |
| 30–39 | 21.58 | 11.75 |
| 40–49 | 24.21 | 16.25 |
| 49< | 31.05 | 39.19 |
| Highest level of education (%) | ||
| Upper secondary/lower secondary/primary education or below University or college entrance qualification | 31.32 | 51.83 |
| 25.52 | 29.45 | |
| 43.16 | 18.72 | |
| Monthly net income (%) | ||
| <150,000 HUF (<c.a. EUR 469) | 6.32 | 244,609 HUF (c.a. EUR 764)/month |
| 150,000–205,000 HUF (c.a. 469–EUR 641) | 11.58 | |
| 205,001–235,000 HUF (c.a. 64–EUR 734) | 11.58 | |
| 235,001–380,000 HUF (c.a. 734–EUR 1188) | 38.68 | |
| 380,001–835,000 HUF (1188–EUR 2609) | 30.00 | |
| 835,000 < HUF (c.a. EUR 2609<) | 1.84 | |
| Residence (%) | ||
| City | 46.84 | 37.91 |
| Urban (non-cities) | 36.32 | 32.58 |
| Rural | 16.84 | 29.51 |
| Household size (mean) | 2.86 | 2.86 |
| Number of children (<18 years) in a household (mean) | 0.57 | 1.06 |
Note: * Hungarian Central Statistical Office [62].
Buying and consuming habits of respondents.
| Average Price Normally Paid for a 70 g Package of Sausage (%) | |
|---|---|
| Below 150 HUF (c.a. EUR 0.47) | 1.32 |
| Between 150–220 HUF (c.a. EUR 0.47–0.69) | 13.68 |
| Between 221–290 HUF (c.a. EUR 0.69–0.91) | 17.90 |
| Between 291–360 HUF (c.a. EUR 0.91–1.13) | 26.58 |
| Between 361–430 HUF (c.a. EUR 1.13–1.34) | 15.26 |
| Between 431–500 HUF (c.a. EUR 1.34–1.56) | 8.16 |
| Above 500 HUF (c.a. EUR 1.56) | 7.63 |
| Does not know | 9.47 |
| Frequency of purchase (%) | |
| Less than once a month | 7.11 |
| Once a month | 25.53 |
| Twice a month | 27.89 |
| Three times a month | 15.26 |
| Once a week | 20.79 |
| More than once a week | 3.16 |
| Does not know | 0.26 |
| Frequency of consumption (%) | |
| Less than once a month | 8.42 |
| Twice or three times a month | 18.42 |
| Once a week | 26.32 |
| Twice a week, three times a week | 37.10 |
| Four to six times a week | 7.11 |
| Every day | 1.58 |
| Does not know | 1.05 |
Coefficient estimates by multinomial logit and mixed logit models.
| Attributes and Model | MNL | MLM | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coeff. | S.E. | Coeff. | S.E. | |
| ASC no choice | −2.39 *** | 0.11 | −4.41 *** | 0.22 |
| Price (scaled by 100) | −0.43 *** | 0.02 | −0.86 *** | 0.07 |
| Price (SD) | − | − | 0.77 *** | 0.11 |
| GI label | 0.58 *** | 0.06 | 0.95 *** | 0.11 |
| GI label (SD) | − | − | 0.82 *** | 0.15 |
| Private brand | 0.53 *** | 0.06 | 0.90 *** | 0.10 |
| Private brand (SD) | − | − | 0.85 *** | 0.14 |
| Spicy | −0.26 *** | 0.06 | −0.51 *** | 0.14 |
| Spicy (SD) | - | - | 2.09 *** | 0.17 |
| Extra Spicy | −0.69 *** | 0.06 | −1.35 *** | 0.17 |
| Extra Spicy (SD) | - | - | 2.39 *** | 0.19 |
|
| 0.15 | 0.28 | ||
| Log-likelihood (0) | −3160.75 | −3160.75 | ||
| Log-likelihood (model) | −2694.89 | −2264.75 | ||
| AIC | 5401.77 | 4551.50 | ||
| BIC | 5436.16 | 4614.55 | ||
Note: S.E. denotes the standard errors; S.D. denotes the standard deviations; ASC represents the alternative-specific constant; *** indicate statistical significance at the 1% level; AIC denotes the Akaike information criterion; BIC denotes the Bayesian information criterion.
Coefficient estimates by two classes latent class and random parameter latent class models.
| Attributes and Model Details | LC | RLC | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coeff. | S.E. | Coeff. | S.E. | |||||
| ASC no choice | −3.13 *** | 0.16 | −4.71 *** | 0.26 | ||||
|
|
|
|
| |||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Price (scaled by 100) | −0.49 *** | 0.03 | −0.70 *** | 0.06 | −0.89 *** | 0.08 | −0.94 *** | 0.12 |
| Price (SD) | - | - | - | - | 0.84 *** | 0.16 | 0.88 *** | 0.22 |
| GI label | 0.73 *** | 0.08 | 0.39 ** | 0.19 | 0.96 *** | 0.13 | 0.73 *** | 0.27 |
| GI label (SD) | - | - | - | - | 0.91 *** | 0.17 | 0.84 ** | 0.41 |
| Private brand | 0.64 *** | 0.07 | 0.83 *** | 0.22 | 0.86 *** | 0.12 | 1.10 *** | 0.19 |
| Private brand (SD) | - | - | - | - | 0.95 *** | 0.15 | 0.06 | 0.40 |
| Spicy | 0.57 *** | 0.09 | −3.37 *** | 0.28 | 0.79 *** | 0.13 | −3.93 *** | 0.62 |
| Spicy (SD) | - | - | - | - | 0.29 | 0.34 | 3.85 *** | 0.64 |
| Extra Spicy | 0.06 | 0.09 | −4.11 *** | 0.40 | 0.24 | 0.20 | −4.35 *** | 0.43 |
| Extra Spicy (SD) | - | - | - | - | 1.30 *** | 0.18 | 0.40 | 0.82 |
| δ | 0.90 *** | 0.13 | −0.61 *** | 0.16 | ||||
| Class probability values | 0.71 | 0.29 | 0.65 | 0.35 | ||||
|
| 0.24 | 0.31 | ||||||
| Log-likelihood (0) | −3160.75 | −3160.75 | ||||||
| Log-likelihood (model) | −2401.92 | −2167.03 | ||||||
| AIC | 4827.85 | 4378.06 | ||||||
| BIC | 4896.63 | 4504.16 | ||||||
Note: S.E. denotes the standard errors; S.D. denotes the standard deviations; δ is a constant in the class allocation equation in case of the latent class models; ASC represents the alternative-specific constant; ** indicate statistical significance at the 5% level; *** indicate statistical significance at the 1% level.
Willingness To Pay estimates for the models.
| Product Attributes | Willingness to Pay | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MNL | MLM | LC | RLC | |||
| Class 1 | Class 2 | Class 1 | Class 2 | |||
| GI label | 1.34 *** | 1.13 *** | 1.48 *** | 0.57 ** | 1.07 *** | 0.93 *** |
| (1.22 ***) | (1.20 ***) | (0.27) | ||||
| Private brand | 1.23 *** | 1.14 *** | 1.31 *** | 1.20 *** | 0.97 *** | 1.58 *** |
| (0.99 ***) | (1.17 ***) | (0.24) | ||||
| Spicy | −0.61 *** | −1.07 *** | 1.16 *** | −4.84 *** | 0.67 *** | −6.19 *** |
| (2.65 ***) | (0.71 ***) | (6.58 ***) | ||||
| Extra Spicy | −1.61 *** | −2.24 *** | 0.12 | −5.90 *** | 0.28 | −8.69 *** |
| (3.24 ***) | (1.53 ***) | (0.09) | ||||
Note: ** indicate statistical significance at the 5% level; *** indicate statistical significance at the 1% level; The standard deviations in the MLM and RLC models are shown in parentheses below the WTP estimates.
Sociodemographic characteristics of classes based on the latent class model.
| Sociodemographic Factors | Traditional | Brand Conscious |
|---|---|---|
| Gender (%) *** | ||
| Female | 45.86 | 58.39 |
| Male | 54.14 | 41.61 |
| Age (category) (%) | ||
| <30 | 23.85 | 21.44 |
| 30–39 | 20.37 | 24.57 |
| 40–49 | 26.26 | 19.15 |
| 49< | 29.52 | 34.84 |
| Highest level of education (%) | ||
| Upper secondary/lower secondary/primary education Below University or college entrance qualification | 31.48 | 30.91 |
| 23.69 | 30.07 | |
| 44.83 | 39.02 | |
| Monthly net income (%) | ||
| <150,000 HUF (<c.a. EUR 469) | 6.30 | 6.37 |
| 150,000–205,000 HUF (c.a. EUR 469–641) | 11.16 | 12.61 |
| 205,001–235,000 HUF (c.a. EUR 641–734) | 12.86 | 8.42 |
| 235,001–380,000 HUF (c.a. EUR 734–1188) | 36.87 | 43.17 |
| 380,001–835,000 HUF (EUR 1188–2609) | 30.82 | 27.96 |
| 835,000 < HUF (c.a. EUR 2609<) | 1.99 | 1.47 |
| Residence (%) | ||
| City | 45.80 | 49.43 |
| Urban (non-cities) | 36.98 | 34.68 |
| Rural | 17.22 | 15.89 |
| Household size (mean) | 2.85 | 2.87 |
| Number of children (<18 year) in a household (mean) | 0.54 | 0.63 |
Note: *** indicates statistically significant difference at the 1% level, using test.
Purchasing and consumption habits of classes based on the latent class model.
| Questions | Traditional Consumers | Brand Conscious Consumers |
|---|---|---|
| Average price normally paid for a 70 g package of sausage (%) | ||
| Below 150 HUF (c.a. EUR 0.47) | 1.81 | 0.08 |
| Between 151–220 HUF | 11.89 | 18.13 |
| Between 221–290 HUF | 17.58 | 18.67 |
| Between 291–360 HUF | 27.20 | 25.04 |
| Between 361–430 HUF | 15.12 | 15.61 |
| Between 431–500 HUF | 9.02 | 6.04 |
| Above 501 HUF (c.a. EUR 1.56) | 8.74 | 4.90 |
| Does not know | 8.64 | 11.53 |
| Frequency of purchase (%) | ||
| Less than once a month | 5.40 | 11.30 |
| Once a month | 23.73 | 29.96 |
| Twice a month | 28.51 | 26.37 |
| Three times a month | 15.36 | 15.04 |
| Once a week | 22.97 | 15.40 |
| More than once a week | 4.02 | 1.02 |
| Do not know | <0.01 | 0.91 |
| Frequency of consumption (%) ** | ||
| Less than once a month | 5.61 | 15.36 |
| Two-three times a month | 15.70 | 25.16 |
| Once a week | 27.57 | 23.22 |
| Two-three times a week | 41.38 | 26.54 |
| Four to six times a week | 7.44 | 6.28 |
| Every day | 1.93 | 0.70 |
| Do not know | 0.37 | 2.74 |
Note: ** indicates statistically significant difference at 5% level, using test.
Systematic literature review on WTP for Geographical Indications (2000–2021).
| Author (Year) | Country, Sample | Product | Attributes (in Addition to Price) | Method and Model | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paffarini, Torquati, Tempesta, Venanzi and Vecchiato [ | Italy, | Lentils | Located in a traditional rural landscape, Located in Natura 2000 SCI, EU quality label (PDO or PGI) | Stated Choice Experiment; Multinomial Logit (MNL), Random Parameter Logit (RPL) and Endogenous Attribute Attendance (EAA) models | The most important attribute affecting the propensityto pay a premium price to buy organic lentils is the EU quality label |
| Bonaiuto, De Dominicis, Cancellieri, Crano, Ma and Bonaiuto [ | Italy, n = 204; China, | Olive oil, pasta | PDO Made in Italy, Made in Italy, Italian Sounding, and Generic Foreign | Different type of scales, repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA), Mediation analyses | PDO label’s positive reputation and WTP is the strongest |
| Ballco and Gracia [ | Zaragoza, Spain, | Olive oil | Origin (local, region, national), PDO | Real Choice Experiment, Error Corrected Random Parameter Logit (ECRPL) model | Higher WTP for local and regional compared to national origin, PDO positive effect on WTP |
| Pérez y Pérez, Gracia and Barreiro-Hurlé [ | Aragon, Spain, | Olive oil | Geographical origin, organic | Stated Choice Experiment; MNL, RPL and ECRPL models | Price most important attribute, PDO positive and more important than organic |
| Sanjuán-López and Resano-Ezcaray [ | Zaragoza, Spain, | Saffron | Origin, PDO, organic, strands/ | Stated and Real Choice Experiment, Conditional Logit (CL) and RPL models | WTP for local, PDO and, to a lesser extent, organic |
| Maza, Gracia and Saied [ | Zaragoza, Spain, | Lamb | Cut of meat, PGI, packaging type, label sticker | Stated Choice Experiment; MNL, RPL and ECPRL models | Positive WTP for PGI. Cut of meat (leg, chop) more important than GI. |
| Garavaglia and Mariani [ | Parma and Monza, Italy, | Dry cured ham | PDO, origin, ageing, taste (sweet/tasty) | Conjoint Analysis, OLS Multiple Regression | PDO more important than origin. More aged hams preferred. |
| Kokthi and Kruja [ | Tirana, Albania, | Cheese | Four varieties differing in terms of origin | Contingent Valuation (blind, labelled, blind and labelled conditions), Paired Sample T-Test | Strong preference for local, but lower if reputation weakened by lack of GI |
| Yangui, Costa-Font and Gil [ | Catalonia, Spain, | Olive oil | Product system (conventional, PDO, organic), origin, brand | Stated Choice Experiment, Hybrid Choice Model (HCM) | Organic attribute generates a disutility, PDO positive values, local preferred over other Spanish and national origin. Brand not significant |
| Pilone, et al. [ | Southern Italy, | Cheese | PGI, shelf life, environmental certification, cheese ageing, pack size | Stated Choice Experiment, CL model | PGI positive value and more important than shelf life and env. certification |
| Albayram, Mattas and Tsakiridou [ | Izmir, Turkey, | Olive oil | GI, local, | Survey scenarios, Binary Logistic Regression | WTP higher for local rather than GI |
| Panico, Del Giudice and Caracciolo [ | Italy, | Olive oil | Origin, certification (organic, GI), taste (sweet, pungent, fruity) | Stated Choice Experiment, RPL model | Positive effect for Italian, organic more valuable than PDO/PGI, strong negative effect for pungent |
| Dhamotharan and Selvaraj [ | Tamil Nadu, India, | Bananas | Quality, production system (organic, GI etc.) | Conjoint Analysis, Part-worth | Positive WTP for certified organic/GI attribute |
| Aprile, et al. [ | Naples, Italy, | Olive oil | PDO, PGI, organic, extra virgin | Stated Choice Experiment, RPL model | PDO higher WTP than PGI or organic (all positive values) |
| Cicia, Cembalo and Del Giudice [ | Germany, | Peaches | Country of origin, PDO/PGI, organic | Stated Choice Experiment, Latent Class (LC) model | Country of origin more important than PDO/PGI and organic. WTP for organic higher than PDO/PGI |
| Menapace, Colson, Grebitus and Facendola [ | Toronto, Canada, | Olive oil | Appearance, certification (PDO, PGI), colour, country of origin, organic, size | Stated Choice Experiment, RPL model | Higher WTP for PDO than PGI. Organic WTP higher than GIs. Strong positive effect for Italy. |
| Fotopoulos and Krystallis [ | Crete, Greece, | Olive oil | Region, PDO | Conjoint Analysis, Part-worth | Region and PDO positive attributes on WTP but former more important |
Note: Conducted on 30 October 2021 using the search terms (geographical indication * OR PDO OR PGI OR protected designation of origin OR protected geographical indication) AND (willingness to pay OR choice experiment OR stated preference *) with the databases Web of Knowledge and Scopus. The search was limited to work published between the years 2000–2021 and in English.