Consumers' preferences for locally produced food: A study in southeast
Missouri
Cheryl Brown
Abstract
A mail survey was used to gather information from the main food
buyer in random households in southeast Missouri to analyze consumer preferences
for locally grown food. A majority of shoppers in the region were not
aware of the state's AgriMissouri promotion program. Consumers defined
locally grown not as a statewide concept but as a narrower regional concept
that could cross state boundaries. Most important when purchasing produce
were quality and freshness, and most consumers perceived local produce
at farmers' markets to be of higher quality and lower price. Farm households
were not significantly different from other households in the region and
did not show a preference or willingness to pay a price premium for local
food products. Food buyers who were members of an environmental group
had higher education and income and were more likely to purchase organic
food and more willing to pay a higher price for local produce. Households
in which someone was raised on a farm, or had parents who were raised
on a farm, had a preference for locally grown food and were willing to
pay a price premium for it. Marketing local products should stress quality,
freshness, and price competitiveness, and appeal to environmentalists
and those with a favorable attitude towards family farms.
Source
American Journal of Alternative Agriculture
(2003) 18: 213-224
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