Title of article
Information on food safety, consumer preference and behavior: The case of seafood in the US
Author/Authors
Wang، نويسنده , , H. Holly and Zhang، نويسنده , , Xu and Ortega، نويسنده , , David L. and Olynk Widmar، نويسنده , , Nicole J.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
8
From page
293
To page
300
Abstract
In this paper, we study three issues related to US consumersʹ attitude about food safety for imported food. First, we investigate the relationship between U.S. consumersʹ perception and their actual behavior when purchasing seafood, and find a conflict in that many consumers think the food country of original label (COOL) is extremely important but they donʹt check the label when purchasing. Second, we assess factors that affect consumersʹ attitude toward country of origin information and safety certification labeling. We find demographic characteristics matter, in that female and less educated individuals care more about both kinds of labels than their counterparts. We also find older people tend to care more about COOL while consumers with higher consumption care more about the labels explicit on food safety. Finally, we address consumersʹ perception on the level of safety associated with fish and shellfish products produced in six major U.S. seafood importing countries. They trust Canada much more than Indonesia, Ecuador, Thailand, China and Viet Nam, and quality certification labels help to improve the trust on Indonesia and Ecuador but not much on the other countries.
Keywords
Country of origin labeling , Food safety , Safety label , Perception behavior conflict
Journal title
Food Control
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Food Control
Record number
1948464
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