Food labelling can play a key role in increasing consumers’ food-related consciousness, and improving the healthiness of their food choices. However consumers’ use of food labels is affected by a number of variables. The aim of this paper is to explore the role of health-orientation on consumers’ use of different labelled information, making a distinction between mandatory and voluntary information (namely, nutrition facts panel vs nutrition and health claims). Data were collected in Italy through face-to-face interviews on a sample of 300 consumers in charge of their grocery shopping. To evaluate the relationship between health-orientation and label usage we developed an index strictly based on the definition of health-orientation itself and included such measure in our analysis, which is based on a set of OLS regressions. The main results overall stress the idea that different degrees of health-orientation are, indeed, reflected in a diverse use of labelled information. Highly health-oriented consumers are more likely to refer to the extensive information reported on nutrition facts panel, whereas claims are of main interest for consumers with low orientation to health. The results also strengthen the key role played by nutrition knowledge and education in favouring a frequent usage of the nutrition facts panel and confirm previous findings on the relationship between socio-economic status and consumers use of labelled information.

Does consumer health-orientation affect the use of nutrition facts panel and claims? An empirical analysis in Italy / A. Cavaliere, E. De Marchi, A. Banterle. - In: FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE. - ISSN 0950-3293. - 54(2016), pp. 110-116.

Does consumer health-orientation affect the use of nutrition facts panel and claims? An empirical analysis in Italy

A. Cavaliere
Primo
;
E. De Marchi
;
A. Banterle
Ultimo
2016

Abstract

Food labelling can play a key role in increasing consumers’ food-related consciousness, and improving the healthiness of their food choices. However consumers’ use of food labels is affected by a number of variables. The aim of this paper is to explore the role of health-orientation on consumers’ use of different labelled information, making a distinction between mandatory and voluntary information (namely, nutrition facts panel vs nutrition and health claims). Data were collected in Italy through face-to-face interviews on a sample of 300 consumers in charge of their grocery shopping. To evaluate the relationship between health-orientation and label usage we developed an index strictly based on the definition of health-orientation itself and included such measure in our analysis, which is based on a set of OLS regressions. The main results overall stress the idea that different degrees of health-orientation are, indeed, reflected in a diverse use of labelled information. Highly health-oriented consumers are more likely to refer to the extensive information reported on nutrition facts panel, whereas claims are of main interest for consumers with low orientation to health. The results also strengthen the key role played by nutrition knowledge and education in favouring a frequent usage of the nutrition facts panel and confirm previous findings on the relationship between socio-economic status and consumers use of labelled information.
No
English
claims; consumer behavior; food label use; food policy; health-orientation; nutrition facts panel; food science; nutrition and dietetics
Settore AGR/01 - Economia ed Estimo Rurale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca applicata
Pubblicazione scientifica
2016
Elsevier
54
110
116
7
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Does consumer health-orientation affect the use of nutrition facts panel and claims? An empirical analysis in Italy / A. Cavaliere, E. De Marchi, A. Banterle. - In: FOOD QUALITY AND PREFERENCE. - ISSN 0950-3293. - 54(2016), pp. 110-116.
partially_open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
3
262
Article (author)
si
A. Cavaliere, E. De Marchi, A. Banterle
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
CavaliereBanterle_DearConsumer_FoodQualityPreference_2016.pdf

accesso riservato

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 385.14 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
385.14 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Manuscript_final.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Post-print, accepted manuscript ecc. (versione accettata dall'editore)
Dimensione 779.51 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
779.51 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/436160
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 33
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 29
social impact