Budget over health unless overweight: A Solomon four‐group study

Budget and health motivations for food purchase (e.g., discounts and health consciousness, respectively) affect consumer choice while shopping and well‐being afterward. However, not all findings from research have suggested that discounts/taxations on healthy/unhealthy food encourage health‐consciou...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of consumer studies 2018-03, Vol.42 (2), p.232-240
Hauptverfasser: Yin, Yue, Özdinç, Yalım
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description Budget and health motivations for food purchase (e.g., discounts and health consciousness, respectively) affect consumer choice while shopping and well‐being afterward. However, not all findings from research have suggested that discounts/taxations on healthy/unhealthy food encourage health‐conscious food choice. On the other hand, the consumer behaviour line of research on the influence of front‐of‐package health messages has mostly echoed similar results that such communication leads to overconsumption; thus, obesity. We examined the influence of market practices targeting consumers’ budget and health‐related motivations for food purchase in a 2 (price: recommended retail price, discount price) × 2 (product: regular potato chips, potato chips with ‘75% less saturated fat’) experiment using six Solomon four‐group designs. Our results indicate that overweight consumers are not prone to discounts, unlike their normal‐weight counterparts. A price cut nullifies the influence of health messages on purchase intentions among normal‐weight buyers when the regular and healthier packaged foods are both on discount.
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source EBSCOhost Business Source Complete; Access via Wiley Online Library; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Body fat
Budgets
Consciousness
Consumer behavior
consumer behaviour
Consumers
Discounts
Food
health
Healthy food
healthy halo
Market strategy
Obesity
Overweight
Price cuts
Prone
Shopping
Solomon four‐group
Well being
title Budget over health unless overweight: A Solomon four‐group study
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