Individual time preference has been recognized as key driver in explaining consumers' probability to have a healthy weight or to incur excess weight problems. The term time preference refers to the rate at which a person is disposed to trade a current satisfaction for a future benefit. This characteristic may affect the extent at which individuals invest in health and may influence diet choices. The purpose of this paper is to analyse which could be the role of time preference (measured in terms of diet-related behaviours) in explaining consumers' healthy or unhealthy body weight. The analysis also considers other drivers predicted to influence BMI, specifically information searching, health-related activities and sociodemographic conditions. The survey was based on face-to-face interviews on a sample of 240 consumers living in Milan. In order to test the hypothesis, we performed a set of seven ORM regressions, all having consumers' BMI as the dependent variable. Each ORM contains a different block of explanatory variables, while time preference is always included among the regressors. The results suggest that the healthy weight condition is associated with a high orientation to the future, with a high interest in nutrition claims, a low attention to health-related claims, and a high level of education. On the opposite, the probability to be overweight or obese increases when consumers are less future-concerned and is associated with a low searching for nutrition claims and to a high interest in health claims.

Healthy–unhealthy weight and time preference. Is there an association? An analysis through a consumer survey / A. Cavaliere, E. De Marchi, A. Banterle. - In: APPETITE. - ISSN 0195-6663. - 83(2014 Dec), pp. 135-143. [10.1016/j.appet.2014.08.011]

Healthy–unhealthy weight and time preference. Is there an association? An analysis through a consumer survey

A. Cavaliere
;
E. De Marchi
Secondo
;
A. Banterle
Ultimo
2014

Abstract

Individual time preference has been recognized as key driver in explaining consumers' probability to have a healthy weight or to incur excess weight problems. The term time preference refers to the rate at which a person is disposed to trade a current satisfaction for a future benefit. This characteristic may affect the extent at which individuals invest in health and may influence diet choices. The purpose of this paper is to analyse which could be the role of time preference (measured in terms of diet-related behaviours) in explaining consumers' healthy or unhealthy body weight. The analysis also considers other drivers predicted to influence BMI, specifically information searching, health-related activities and sociodemographic conditions. The survey was based on face-to-face interviews on a sample of 240 consumers living in Milan. In order to test the hypothesis, we performed a set of seven ORM regressions, all having consumers' BMI as the dependent variable. Each ORM contains a different block of explanatory variables, while time preference is always included among the regressors. The results suggest that the healthy weight condition is associated with a high orientation to the future, with a high interest in nutrition claims, a low attention to health-related claims, and a high level of education. On the opposite, the probability to be overweight or obese increases when consumers are less future-concerned and is associated with a low searching for nutrition claims and to a high interest in health claims.
No
English
Time preference; Economics of obesity; Consumer; Ordinal Regression Model
Settore AGR/01 - Economia ed Estimo Rurale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca applicata
Pubblicazione scientifica
dic-2014
83
135
143
9
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Healthy–unhealthy weight and time preference. Is there an association? An analysis through a consumer survey / A. Cavaliere, E. De Marchi, A. Banterle. - In: APPETITE. - ISSN 0195-6663. - 83(2014 Dec), pp. 135-143. [10.1016/j.appet.2014.08.011]
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
3
262
Article (author)
no
A. Cavaliere, E. De Marchi, A. Banterle
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/256132
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