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Are Consumers in Developing Countries Willing to Pay More for Micronutrient‐Dense Biofortified Foods? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Uganda
179
Citations
32
References
2011
Year
NutritionConsumer UncertaintyDevelopment EconomicsField ExperimentVitamin A DeficiencyPublic Health NutritionAgricultural EconomicsConsumer ResearchMicronutrient‐dense Biofortified FoodsSustainable Food SystemBiofortified Staple CropsFood ChoiceFood MarketingAre ConsumersFood SystemsPublic HealthFood ConsumptionFood PolicyConsumer ChoiceLocal Food SystemsHealth SciencesEconomicsConsumer Decision MakingChoice ExperimentFood QualityMicronutrientsMarketingFood RegulationsFood SustainabilityGlobal HealthAgri-food SystemsConsumer Attitude
Vitamin A deficiency is a major health problem in Africa and in many other developing countries. Biofortified staple crops that are high in pro‐vitamin A have the potential to reduce the prevalence of vitamin A deficiency. Using a choice experiment with the real product in Uganda, we quantify the magnitude of the premium or discount in consumers’ willingness‐to‐pay (WTP) that may be associated with it. Results suggest that taste plays an important role in consumer acceptance, and the provision of nutrition information does translate into substantial premiums for the biofortified variety. There is a substantial hypothetical bias in the WTP for the new varieties, and while cheap talk mitigates this bias, it does not eliminate it.
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