Facilitators and inhibitors of organic food buying behavior

Anushree Tandon, Fauzia Jabeen, Shalini Talwar, Mototaka Sakashita, Amandeep Dhir

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

89 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Consumption patterns across the globe indicate consumers’ rising interest in purchasing organic food due to increasing personal-health consciousness. However, research on organic food shows a low translation of this interest into stated preferences for purchasing organic food. Limited academic research has explored this puzzling buying behavior of consumers, particularly in developed economies such as Japan. Our study addresses this gap by examining the factors that facilitate or inhibit Japanese consumers’ buying behavior toward organic food. We use the Stimulus-Organism-Response framework, Innovation Resistance Theory, and Dual-Factor Theory to examine these factors by analyzing data collected from 928 consumers. We propose that health consciousness is a stimulus that has a positive impact on facilitators (natural content, nutritional content, and ecological welfare) as well as inhibitors (usage, risk, and value barriers). We further argue that stated buying behavior is the outcome of both facilitators and inhibitors. The findings confirm that health consciousness is positively associated with all facilitators and inhibitors. The analysis also reveals that all three facilitators and two inhibitors (value and risk barriers) are associated with stated buying behavior. Furthermore, buying involvement (BI) positively moderates the associations between stated buying behavior and nutritional content (facilitator) as well as risk barrier (inhibitor). Gender moderates the association of all facilitators and risk barrier with stated buying behavior.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104077
JournalFood Quality and Preference
Volume88
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021 Mar

Keywords

  • Dual-Factor Theory
  • Facilitators
  • Inhibitors
  • Innovation Resistance Theory
  • Organic food
  • Stimulus-Organism-Response framework

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Food Science
  • Nutrition and Dietetics

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