Publication | Open Access
Understanding Heterogeneous Consumer Preferences in Chinese Milk Markets: A Latent Class Approach
47
Citations
38
References
2019
Year
Consumer EconomicsMilk ChoicesBehavioral Decision MakingConsumer StudyAgricultural EconomicsConsumer ResearchChinese Milk MarketsLatent Class ApproachFood MarketingChoice ModelManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisConsumer BehaviorTraceability LabelConsumer ChoiceEconomicsConsumer Decision MakingHeterogeneous Consumer PreferencesMarketingConsumer ScienceBusinessConsumer Attitude
Abstract We examine heterogeneous consumer preferences in Chinese milk markets. Using a discrete choice experiment, we examine how the brand, quality certification, traceability label and price influence consumers' milk choices. We identify four consumer segments using a latent class model: price conscious (9.8%), balanced thinking (19.8%), health conscious (57.5%), and environment conscious (12.9%) consumers. These four segments have distinct preferences: price conscious consumers prefer green certification; balanced thinking consumers have the highest willingness to pay for traceability labels; health conscious consumers have strong brand awareness; and environment conscious consumers prefer organic certification and traceability labels and use price as a quality signal. Such diversity of consumer preference can be explained by four psychological factors: price consciousness, food safety concerns, health consciousness and environmental concerns.
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