The importance of taste for food demand and the expected taste effect of healthy labels - An experiment on potato chips and bread
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- The importance of taste for food demand and the expected taste effect of healthy labels
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This paper quantitatively analyzes the importance of taste versus health in food demand, as well as the effect on consumers’ experienced taste of the non-intrinsic value of healthy labels. Our analysis is based on taste experiments and Vickrey second price auctions on potato chips and bread. Our findings imply a large positive effect on demand for potato chips from higher taste scores: when consumers’ experienced taste from potato chips improves by one unit, the average willingness-to-pay (WTP) for a 150 gram bag of chips increases by 25 euro cents. The estimated effect from taste on bread demand is smaller, but may be sizeable for subgroups of consumers. Our evidence suggests that demand for chips and bread is unaffected by nutrition – the effect of the healthy label on WTP is not statistically significant. Finally, we find that consumers’ experienced taste of a food is unaffected by the food carrying a healthy label.
Original language | English |
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Place of Publication | Lund |
Publisher | Department of Economics, Lund University |
Number of pages | 19 |
Publication status | Published - 2014 |
Externally published | Yes |
Series | Working Paper Department of Economics, Lund University |
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Number | 2014:13 |
Bibliographical note
Published as: Thunström, L. and Nordström, J. (2015), Determinants of Food Demand and the Experienced Taste Effect of Healthy Labels - An experiment on potato chips and bread, Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 56, 13-20.
- Consumers and food - Healthy label, non-intrinsic value, Taste, Revealed preferences , Willingness-to-pay for food
- Faculty of Social Sciences
Research areas
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