CONSUMER PERCEPTION ON ALTERNATIVE POULTRY



provided by Research Papers in Economics



International Food and Agribusiness Management Review
Vol 5 Iss 2 2003

Consumer Perception on Alternative Poultry*

Tatiana M. Q. Farina a ® and Silvia F. de Almeida b

a Department of Economics, University of Sao Paulo, Rua Victor Brecheret,17, Sao Paulo, SP
04008-100,Brazil

b Department of Economics, University of Sao Paulo, Rua Pedroso Alvarenga, 157 apto 94, Sao Paulo, SP
04531-010,Brazil

1. Introduction

The pattern of world food consumption has changed in the last decades towards a greater
demand for quality attributes. Recent crises of food safety, such as dioxin, “mad cow”,
foot-and-mouth disease, have attracted the consumers' attention. However, the quality
attributes are not only related to food safety, but also to the impact that production has
on the environment and on social welfare. Despite the low per capita income in Brazil, a
growing number of consumers have become concerned with these issues and are willing
to pay price premiums for natural foods, which supposedly do not contain chemical
products or other sources of contamination in addition to being produced in an
environmentally friendly manner (Regmi
et al , 2001; Unctad et al , 1999).

Due to the increasing demand of consumer groups in relation to the issues cited above, a
market niche has emerged for organic agriculture. The market for organics is of
particular interest, because of its brisk growth in recent years. In Brazil, there is already
a wide range of organic products being produced both for the domestic market and,
mainly, for the external market. Nevertheless, it is still difficult to assess the size and
evolution of this market due to the lack of regular and methodologically-based research
generating statistics on it (Pensa, 2002; Unctad,1999).

* This project was conducted under the supervision of Prof. Elizabeth Farina, vice-coordinator of PENSA and Full Professor of the
Economics Department of USP and Dr. Guy Henry of Cirad.

® Corresponding author: Tel: + 55-11-557-93179

Fax: + 55-11-508-41640

Email: [email protected]

Other contact information: Ms. S^lvia de Almeida [email protected] Tel: + 55-11-307-95628.

© 2003 International Food and Agribusiness Management Association (IAMA). All rights reserved.



More intriguing information

1. THE CO-EVOLUTION OF MATTER AND CONSCIOUSNESS1
2. The Modified- Classroom ObservationScheduletoMeasureIntenticnaCommunication( M-COSMIC): EvaluationofReliabilityandValidity
3. National urban policy responses in the European Union: Towards a European urban policy?
4. Regional specialisation in a transition country - Hungary
5. The name is absent
6. The name is absent
7. Regulation of the Electricity Industry in Bolivia: Its Impact on Access to the Poor, Prices and Quality
8. The Nobel Memorial Prize for Robert F. Engle
9. Cyclical Changes in Short-Run Earnings Mobility in Canada, 1982-1996
10. The name is absent
11. 03-01 "Read My Lips: More New Tax Cuts - The Distributional Impacts of Repealing Dividend Taxation"
12. IMPLICATIONS OF CHANGING AID PROGRAMS TO U.S. AGRICULTURE
13. The name is absent
14. Exchange Rate Uncertainty and Trade Growth - A Comparison of Linear and Nonlinear (Forecasting) Models
15. Making International Human Rights Protection More Effective: A Rational-Choice Approach to the Effectiveness of Ius Standi Provisions
16. The name is absent
17. Managing Human Resources in Higher Education: The Implications of a Diversifying Workforce
18. Behaviour-based Knowledge Systems: An Epigenetic Path from Behaviour to Knowledge
19. Campanile Orchestra
20. Whatever happened to competition in space agency procurement? The case of NASA