1. Introduction
Frequent food safety problems in recent years have continuously and repeatedly unsettled the Chinese public. In fact, food safety risks are a common problem facing many countries worldwide. Consumers worldwide are often faced with varying degrees of food safety risks. According to the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates, approximately 2.2 million deaths are caused by foodborne or watery diarrhea every year throughout the world [
1]. Approximately 5000 people died each year in the United States prior to 1999 from foodborne disease [
2]. Since 2011, the total number of foodborne disease cases has been estimated to be 48 million in the United States, with 3000 annual deaths [
1]. The situation in China is even worse. Many food safety incidents have occurred in China, such as tainted melamine milk powder, Sudan red salted duck eggs, and sick or dead pigs in the market; these incidents have caused more than 50,000 people to become sick or die [
3].
When consumers’ health is impaired, they often cannot immediately or definitively attribute the disease to a certain food. Moreover, consumers cannot observe the production process, thus leading to information asymmetry in food safety information attributes [
4]. Food traceability systems are able to monitor food production and distribution by generating a reliable continuous flow of safety information in the supply chain, to identify the source of the problem, and recall related products through traceability [
5]. These systems are, therefore, considered a major tool for the effective elimination of information asymmetry and the fundamental prevention of food safety risks [
6] and have been widely implemented in America as well as many European countries. China has continued to promote the construction of food traceability systems since 2010. However, the construction of food traceability systems has not fundamentally reduced food safety incidents [
7].
Regulation (EC) No. 178/2002, implemented by the European Union, strictly defines the content of food traceability information, requiring complete traceability information covering all processes of the food supply chain, and outlines the information attributes required for each process. Hobbs [
4] indicated that complete food traceability systems should possess the basic functions of both ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability. Ex ante quality verification enables consumers to confirm food safety and quality prior to purchase via credence attribute labels. Ex post traceability allows for timely recall with complete traceability information along the food supply chain in the event of food safety problems and establishes accountability for such problems. Currently, the policies of the Chinese traceable pork market system mainly focus on sporadic work guidelines and pilot traceable pork systems in the Chinese market, which only allow for ex post traceability [
8] and might explain the current failure of such systems [
9]. The production of traceable pork with both ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability will inevitably increase costs, which will be reflected in the market price. Since consumers might not be willing to pay (WTP) such an increased price, investigating the market demand for traceable pork with ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability will positively contribute to the development of a traceable food market system and the reduction of foodborne diseases in China.
Compared with ordinary food, traceable food is composed of traceability, transparency, and quality assurance [
10]. Hobbs [
4] summarized the effects of establishing food traceability systems into two basic functions: ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability. Research shows that a combination of animal welfare, origin certification, quality inspection, environmental impact, safety assurance, and other information attributes in food traceability systems can provide ex ante quality verification, which can play a greater role than ex post traceability in eliminating information asymmetry [
4,
11]. A product can have search, experience, and confidence attributes [
12]; ex ante quality verification provides credence attributes related to food safety in the form of labels, which is equivalent to converting credence attributes of food safety to search attributes, thus reducing the search costs [
8]. Thus, traceable food can be considered a combination of various information attributes.
Numerous studies have been performed on consumer preferences for traceability information, quality, and safety assurance, as well as other information attributes. For example, Loureiro and Umberger [
13] indicated that U.S. consumers showed higher preferences for beef with food safety inspection and certification information from the United States Department of Agriculture than that with traceability only. Furthermore, Morteza [
14] suggested that the vast majority of Canadian consumers were willing to pay a 15% premium for certified farmed Atlantic salmon. Lu et al. [
15] indicated that Chinese consumers had the highest WTP for government certification information and attached the greatest importance to farming information and comprehensive traceability information on the whole. Relevant studies have attempted to explore the relationships among traceability information attributes while evaluating consumer preferences. Wu et al. [
8] revealed a substitute relationship between traceability to slaughter and processing and local production and showed a complementary relationship between traceability to slaughter and processing and nonlocal production. Ortega et al. [
16] reported a substitute relationship between government quality and safety inspection and third-party quality certification and between third-party quality certification and traceability, as well as a complementary relationship between government quality and safety inspection and additional information labeling, between additional information labeling and traceability, and between government quality and safety inspection and traceability. Ubilava and Foster [
17] found a substitute relationship between government food safety and quality assurance and supply chain traceability. Lim et al. [
18] demonstrated a complementary relationship between safety assurance, such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy detection, and traceability.
The existing literature provides a useful reference for research. However, there are still some remaining deficiencies. First, the majority of earlier research made no strict distinction between ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability attributes of traceable food. Moreover, most previously investigated information attributes of traceable food have been related to ex post traceability [
19,
20] and lacked holistic research on traceable pork attributes. In fact, the information attributes of different functions have different effects on consumer preferences. Second, although substitute or complementary relationships between attributes have been determined, one-way or two-way interrelationships between attributes have not yet been investigated. Furthermore, the amount of information included in the attributes themselves has not been considered (the definition of the amount of information contained in traceability attributes varies between studies. Some studies only cover one or a few processes for traceability, and some cover all processes of the entire supply chain.). In fact, the degree of mutual substitutability can vary between different amounts of information and between two similar attributes. Third, choice experiments, conjoint analyses, and contingent valuation methods remain the major techniques used in most studies. However, these mainstream research methods have flaws, for example, when the profiles of attributes and levers are given, consumers will be forced to choose even if there is a substitutional relation between the attributes [
21]. In addition, in order to simulate different scenarios, it is usually necessary to design multiple tasks, each of which has more than two options. Therefore, consumers will have a large reaction error from completing the first task to the last task [
22]. Most importantly, consumers are not sensitive to virtual profile prices during the experiment [
23]. The purpose of this paper is to explore the interactions between multiple attributes and the consumer’s response to cost-driven prices changes. Therefore, exploring the appropriate tools needed to capture a consumer’s corresponding response to price changes will facilitate more accurate research.
Taking pork as a case, we constructed a relatively complete traceable pork attribute system consisting of supply chain traceability, supply chain–internal traceability, pork quality inspection, and enterprise quality management system certification attributes. According to Hobbs’ [
4] classification criteria for ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability systems, the pork quality inspection and enterprise quality management system certification attributes were regarded as attributes of traceable pork with the ex ante quality verification function, while the supply chain traceability and supply chain–internal traceability attributes were regarded as attributes of traceable pork with the ex post traceability function. Then, we employed a menu-based choice (MBC) experiment to examine consumer preferences for the information attributes of traceable food with ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability functions and to examine the food traceability systems that meet the needs of most Chinese consumers, the results of which can provide a reference for the Chinese government to implement a traceable food policy.
4. Conclusions
In this study, two ex ante quality verification attributes, pork quality inspection and quality management system certification, and two ex post traceability attributes, supply chain traceability and supply chain–internal traceability, were established for traceable pork. Interactions between safety information attributes and the consumer’s response to cost-driven price changes were investigated for 345 consumers in Wuxi, China, using the menu-based choice (MBC) experiment and the multivariate probit (MVP) model. Results showed that, first, food safety information attributes were important to consumers. Compared with the ex post traceability attributes, the consumers preferred safety information attributes with an ex ante quality verification function. In the ex ante quality verification attributes, the consumer’s preference for the pork quality inspection attribute was superior to the quality management system certification attribute. Therefore, setting the pork quality inspection attribute in the form of a label on traceable pork can more effectively convey pork safety information. It also indicated that setting the pork quality inspection attribute for the traceable pork had a certain market consumption demand.
Second, pork quality inspection and supply chain–internal traceability were the two elastic attributes most preferred by consumers for ex ante quality verification and ex post traceability, respectively. When customization cannot be achieved or subject to budget constraint, a profile composed of pork quality inspection and supply chain–internal traceability would be the most preferred traceable pork product in the market based on the need of building a fully functional traceable food system and reducing food safety risks. Third, attribute price was an important factor that affected consumers’ choice of information attribute. The relationship between attribute price and demand indicated that there was a strong substitution relationship between different information attributes. In addition, heterogeneity was observed in consumers’ choice of traceable pork information attribute. Individual and family characteristics, foodborne illness experiences, food safety concerns, and trust in safety information labels all significantly affected consumers’ choice of information attributes. Fourth, the pork quality inspection attribute and supply chain–internal traceability attribute are attributes with a greater elasticity of demand. If the government can subsidize traceable pork consisting of these two attributes, it will not only increase consumer demand but also increase the profitability of the relevant traceable pork suppliers, which may motivate traceable pork suppliers to proactively provide quality and safety information.
This research provides guidelines for promoting the development of a safe food market system and the reduction of food safety risks, as well as foodborne diseases, in China. The government should encourage manufacturers to produce traceable food with food quality inspection via customization through subsidies and other policies to meet consumer demand for safe food and to reduce the spread of foodborne diseases. In addition, as supply chain traceability is a basic requirement of consumers, ex post traceability should cover all the risk processes of the entire food supply chain. Furthermore, the government should support manufacturers in producing multi-level safe food to meet diverse consumer demand and gradually promote the construction of a traceable food market system, and manufacturers should dynamically adjust their production and marketing strategies for different types of safe food based on consumer preferences. This study has some limitations. For example, a possible explanation for the complexity of the aggregate price effect exhibited by the Marshallian demand function in different market situations in this paper only was conducted on the theoretical level, and there was a lack of statistical test tools to further verify this theoretical interpretation. In addition, for the sake of simplicity, this study did not conduct a market simulation based on the scenario that ordinary pork and safe pork with different attributes and level combinations are circulated in the market simultaneously. Therefore, future studies should overcome this limitation and propose development pathways for China’s food safety system that are in accordance with the actual situation in the country.