Publication | Open Access
Consumers' Motivations Driving Organic Demand: Between Self-interest and Sustainability
47
Citations
25
References
2016
Year
Sustainable ConsumptionConsumer MotivationSustainable DevelopmentConsumer ResearchAgricultural EconomicsShopping BasketsOrganic DemandFood ChoiceFood MarketingManagementConsumer BehaviorOrganic FoodFood ConsumptionHealth SciencesConsumer Decision MakingMotivationConsumerismFood QualityConsumption SystemMarketingConsumer TrustConsumer ScienceConsumer Attitude
We study consumers’ motivations for buying organic food by analyzing their shopping baskets. Buying organic can be motivated by concern about sustainable development and/or self-interest (considerations related to health or product quality). Pro-social motivation is inferred from the presence of fair trade products in the consumer's basket; consumer self-interest is deduced from the presence of healthy and higher-quality products bearing special quality labels or certifications. Our results indicate that environmental motivation predicts organic food purchases better than health or quality considerations: the complementarity between organic and fair trade products is strongest. In addition, the household's socioeconomic background influences secondary motivations.
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