By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Researchers used the value Americans and Europeans
placed on a chocolate chip cookie to determine consumer
attitudes towards genetically modified foods. The
research, conducted jointly by Mississippi State University
and the University of Reading, England, found that Americans
on average are less concerned about consuming genetically
modified foods than their European counterparts. Jayson
Lusk, agricultural economist with the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, said research
in the summer and fall of 2002 involved primary household
shoppers in Long Beach, Calif.; Jacksonville, Fla.; Lubbock,
Texas; Reading, England; and Grenoble, France. Subjects in
each case were asked questions to determine their knowledge
of and attitudes about the use of genetic modification in
foods. Then they participated in an auction to determine
their preferences for a genetically modified chocolate chip
cookie. "We had
consumers in each of the locations participate in an active
market exercise that involved the exchange of real food and
real money to determine the price-premium they placed on a
chocolate chip cookie containing no genetically modified
ingredients versus one containing genetically modified
ingredients," Lusk said. Each
consumer was given a cookie free of genetically modified
ingredients. In an auction setting, researchers determined
how much money it took to get these consumers to exchange
their cookie for one containing genetically modified
ingredients. All participants had to eat the cookie at the
end of the exercise. "U.S.
consumers were much more willing to consume the genetically
modified cookie than were the European consumers," Lusk
said. More
than 65 percent of the Americans either exchanged the cookie
for free or required less than $.25 to make the trade. Only
37 percent of the English and 27 percent of the French
required similar compensation. "In
contrast, 52 percent of the French consumers demanded more
than $2 to eat a genetically modified cookie, while only 16
percent of the English and 9 percent of the Americans
required a similar price," Lusk said. He said
the data indicates on average, European consumers are more
concerned about genetically modified food than are U.S.
consumers, but there are significant segments of the English
and French populations with relatively low concern about
this issue. "Having
established that there are differences in U.S. and European
consumers, the interesting question now becomes why these
differences exist," Lusk said. The
survey that accompanied the cookie auction addressed this
question. Lusk said researchers theorized some differences
in opinion may exist because of differences in knowledge,
trust, general attitudes about the environment, food and
technology, and perceptions of the benefits and risks of
biotechnology. Lusk
said the survey found French consumers strongly believed
they were knowledgeable about genetically modified foods,
but true/false questions revealed little difference in
actual knowledge among consumers in the three countries.
Responses showed all the consumers had moderate to low
objective knowledge about genetically modified
foods. "The
French and English consumers were much more concerned about
the environment in general, and view genetically modified
foods as a greater risk to the environment than do U.S.
consumers," Lusk said. "English and French consumers were
much less optimistic about the ability of technology in
general to improve society and civilization than were U.S.
consumers." Among
the Americans surveyed, California consumers held opinions
more similar to those of European consumers than the U.S.
consumers in Texas and Florida. California consumers
demanded an average of two times as much money as consumers
in Texas and Florida to exchange their non-modified cookie
for one that contained genetically modified
ingredients. Lusk
said U.S. consumers trust federal food regulatory agencies
and agribusinesses while their European counterparts tend to
believe activist groups. The only demographic that appeared
to influence consumers' acceptance was age, with older
consumers more acceptant of genetic modification of food
than were younger consumers. Lusk
said the findings should help agricultural producers
understand consumer demand for genetically modified foods
and help predict future changes in market opportunities.
Since a large portion of the U.S. agricultural output is
exported, American producers need to know international
consumers' perceptions of genetically modified foods.
Released:
March 10, 2003
Mississippi
Agricultural News
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Genetically
modified foods ...
Cookies
measure consumer
attitudes
Contact: Dr. Jayson Lusk, (662) 325-3796
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:00
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an03/030310.html
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