Who Wants Chicken? Uncovering Consumer Preferences for Produce of Alternative Chicken Product Methods
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Dual-Purpose Breeds: Consumer Perspectives on an Alternative to Killing Day-Old Male Chicks
1.2. Faba Beans: An Alternative to Soy Imports for Protein Feedstuff
1.3. Study Aim and Research Questions
- RQ1: What is consumers’ preference for dual-purpose breeds, regionally and German produced feed, and specific breeds over other attributes when buying chicken meat?
- RQ2: How can these preferences be explained?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Conceptual Framework
2.1.1. Discrete Choice Experiment
- Breeding form: The levels of this attribute were chosen to test consumers’ preference for (1) dual-purpose breeds, (2) breeding of the brother—rearing brothers of laying hens despite their low fattening performance, (3) organic products, which consumers usually associate with higher animal welfare standards and show a higher WTP for these [43,44,45,46], and (4) no information, which resembles the current market situation where basic information regarding the husbandry system (barn raised, free range, organic) is provided.
- Breed: The levels chosen for this attribute were four dual-purpose breeds currently used in Germany; (1) Bresse Gauloise (BG), a French native DPB commonly used due to its good laying and fattening performance, (2) Vorwerkhuhn (VH), a German native DPB used mainly to preserve the genotype [14], (3) White Rock (WR), a commercial laying line with potential to be used as a DPB, and (4) Kollbecksmoor (KM), a crossbreed of VH and WR used due to its good laying and fattening performance. The name of each breed was presented along with a picture of the corresponding breed in order to increase consumers’ exposure to each breed’s appearance.
- Price: The levels of this attribute were based on current market prices in Germany for breast fillets; the lowest level corresponds to the lowest market price, while the highest level to the highest market price. The levels in between are 9.64 EUR apart from the previous and following levels.
- Product origin: The levels in this attribute were chosen to test consumers’ preference for a regional product over (1) national (German) product, (2) product from the EU, since it is where Germany imports mostly from [3], and (3) product from outside the EU.
- Feed origin: The levels in this attribute were chosen to test consumers’ preference for regional faba beans over (1) German faba beans, (2) Brazilian soy, since it is the most common protein feedstuff [47,48] and the country where most imports to the EU come from [48], and (3) no information, which resembles the current market situation where no information regarding the feedstuff is provided.
2.1.2. Theory of Planned Behavior
2.2. Survey Design
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Discrete Choice Experiment
3.1.1. Hierarchical Bayes
3.1.2. Latent Class Analysis
3.2. Extended Theory of Planned Behavior
3.3. Characterization of Classes
4. Discussion
4.1. Consumers’ Preference for Each Attribute
4.2. Preferences of Each Consumer Segment
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Predictors | Wording | |
---|---|---|
ATB [53] | 1 | The purchase of products from DPB (eggs and meat) is interesting for me. |
2 | It is a good idea to buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | |
3 | It is important for me to buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | |
4 | The purchase of products from DPB (meat and eggs) is good. | |
SN [53,60,62] | 1 | People who are important to me think that I should buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). |
2 | People who are important to me want me to buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | |
3 | People whose opinions I value would prefer that I buy chicken and eggs from DPB. | |
4 | The positive opinion of my friends influences me to buy products from DPB (meat and eggs). | |
PBC [62] | 1 | I know where I can buy chicken and eggs from DPB. |
2 | I am confident that I will buy chicken meat and eggs from DPB. | |
3 | I see myself in a position to buy chicken meat and eggs from DPB in the future. | |
4 | I am ready to invest more time and money in purchasing chicken meat and eggs from DPB. | |
5 | Products from DPB (meat and eggs) are available in the shops where I usually go shopping. | |
PNAW [61] | 1 | People should do everything to improve animal welfare. |
2 | I feel a moral obligation to buy DPB products (meat and eggs) regardless of what others do. | |
3 | I feel guilty buying meat and eggs where the day-old chicks were killed. | |
4 | I feel morally obliged to consider animal welfare in my daily behavior. | |
PNR [61] | 1 | People should do everything possible to increase the consumption of regional products. |
2 | I feel a moral obligation to buy products from this region, regardless of what others do. | |
3 | I feel guilty if I buy chicken and eggs from other countries or regions. | |
4 | I feel obliged to consider regional consumption in my daily behavior. |
Current poultry farming system |
“The intensive poultry husbandry of chickens is characterized by specialized laying breeds (egg production) and fattening breeds (meat production). For modern meat production, specialized fattening breeds are used, which reach a weight of 2.6 kg within 6 weeks and can then be slaughtered. Specialized laying breeds are used in egg production, which lay up to 330 eggs in a laying period of 56 weeks. These laying breeds are thin and do not produce much meat, even when fully grown. The problem with the laying breeds is that only the female animals can lay eggs. Since this breed produces little meat and the male chicks do not lay eggs, these (male chicks) are generally killed today on the first day of life. This practice is carried out today by almost all farmers in conventional farming and by the vast majority in organic farming.” |
Dual-purpose breeds |
“A possible solution to avoid the direct killing of male chicks is the use of “brother cocks”. These are the male siblings of the laying hens, which are reared as broilers. However, the use of brother cocks is regarded as a transitional solution until there are solid dual-purpose breeds, because these chickens are relatively expensive. A dual-purpose breed is a breed that can be used for both production systems (eggs and meat). This means that the female hens lay relatively many eggs, the male hens gain weight relatively well. Both are not as good as the specialized breeds, but they can do both, which also explains the name “dual-purpose breed”. Since these breeds are not only for egg production, chicks do not have to be killed and can be used for meat production. This prevents the male chicks from being killed directly and then new chickens from being bought for meat production only. At the moment it is possible to buy products from dual-purpose chickens. However, these products are not very common as they are only available in certain regions and shops.” |
Current poultry feed situation |
“Another current problem with chicken production is that many farmers in Germany produce only a small part of the feed for their animals themselves. In most cases, this is purchased from feed manufacturers. A supply bottleneck (i.e., less produced than used) exists throughout the EU, especially for protein feed (protein). For the protein supply of livestock in Germany, 27% of this feed component must be imported. Most of the imported raw protein is in the form of soybeans and soy extraction meal, which are mainly produced in the USA or South America (e.g., Brazil). In the public debate, some interest groups are calling for the import of protein feed to be reduced and for only domestic raw materials to be used. One reason for this is, for example, the criticism of genetically modified varieties. In order to solve this problem, farmers and scientists are looking for other protein sources with correspondingly available protein quantity and quality.” |
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Attributes | Levels | Prohibitions |
---|---|---|
Breeding form | Organic | 5.98 EUR/kg |
Breeding of the brother | ||
Dual-purpose breed | 5.98 EUR/kg | |
No information | ||
Breed | Bresse Gauloise | 5.98 EUR/kg |
Vorwerkhuhn | ||
White Rock | ||
Kollbecksmoor | ||
Price | 5.98 EUR/kg | Regional product |
15.62 EUR/kg | ||
25.26 EUR/kg | ||
34.90 EUR/kg | Non-EU product origin | |
Product origin | Regional | |
Germany | ||
EU | ||
Non-EU | Regional faba beans, German faba beans | |
Feed origin | Regional faba beans | 5.98 EUR/kg |
German faba beans | ||
Brazilian soy | ||
No information |
Sample (%) | Population (%) | Sample (%) | Population (%) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | Education | ||||
Female | 50.9 | 50.7 | No education | 0.5 | 4.0 |
Male | 49.1 | 49.3 | Lower secondary education | 34.3 | 31.4 |
Age | High school diploma | 30.8 | 29.4 | ||
18–24 years old | 8.8 | 9.1 | Technical college | 15.3 | 13.7 |
25–39 years old | 20.8 | 22.6 | University degree | 19.1 | 17.1 |
40–64 years old | 43.5 | 43.1 | Income (net/month) | ||
65 or more years old | 27.0 | 25.2 | Less than 1300 EUR | 25.1 | 26.3 |
1300–2599 EUR | 39.3 | 39.6 | |||
2600–4999 EUR | 28.1 | 27.1 | |||
5000 EUR or more | 7.6 | 6.5 |
Groups | Log-Likelihood | AIC | CAIC | BIC | Chi-Square |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | −9242.67 | 18,551.35 | 18,820.04 | 18,787.04 | 7410.62 |
3 | −8749.21 | 17,598.42 | 18,005.52 | 17,955.52 | 8397.55 |
4 | −8440.82 | 17,015.64 | 17,561.16 | 17,494.16 | 9014.33 |
5 | −8268.78 | 16,705.56 | 17,389.50 | 17,305.50 | 9358.40 |
Class 1 | Class 2 | Class 3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Size (%) | 22.8 | 20.0 | 57.2 |
Attribute importance (%) | |||
Breeding form *** | 5.10 | 5.09 | 17.09 |
Breed *** | 2.57 | 2.44 | 4.16 |
Price *** | 70.27 | 62.13 | 18.76 |
Product origin *** | 11.30 | 20.52 | 27.63 |
Feed origin *** | 10.73 | 9.76 | 32.33 |
Part-worth utilities | |||
Breeding form | |||
Dual-purpose breed | 9.44 | −5.80 | 31.16 |
Breeding of the brother | 10.06 | 10.95 | 26.38 |
Organic | −4.38 | 9.52 | −3.30 |
No information | −15.13 | −14.68 | −54.28 |
Breed | |||
Vorwerkhuhn | −6.40 | −7.50 | 0.17 |
White Rock | 6.36 | 2.60 | 8.12 |
Bresse Gauloise | 3.78 | 4.77 | 4.44 |
Kollbecksmoor | −3.73 | 0.11 | −12.73 |
Price | |||
5.98 EUR/kg | 171.41 | 181.68 | −0.21 |
15.62 EUR/kg | 68.11 | 28.45 | 43.67 |
25.26 EUR/kg | −58.60 | −80.85 | 6.99 |
34.90 EUR/kg | −180.92 | −129.29 | −50.45 |
Product origin | |||
Regional | 16.29 | 36.37 | 55.93 |
Germany | 17.67 | 30.83 | 49.48 |
European Union | 3.93 | −1.68 | −23.19 |
Non-EU | −37.90 | −65.52 | −82.22 |
Feed origin | |||
Regional field beans | 21.71 | 12.94 | 72.00 |
German field beans | 21.39 | 19.22 | 71.58 |
Brazilian soy | −32.40 | −2.19 | −89.43 |
No information | −10.70 | −29.97 | −54.15 |
None | −143.76 | 120.14 | −104.11 |
Wording | Factor Loading | Mean|SD |
---|---|---|
Factor 1: “Attitude towards DPB” (Cα: 0.882) | ||
It is a good idea to buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | 0.911 | 2.02|1.21 |
The purchase of products from DPB (meat and eggs) is good. | 0.887 | 2.11|1.19 |
The purchase of products from DPB (eggs and meat) is interesting for me. | 0.870 | 2.29|1.34 |
It is important for me to buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | 0.680 | 2.80|1.39 |
I am confident that I will buy chicken meat and eggs from DPB. | 0.615 | 2.77|1.47 |
I see myself in a position to buy chicken meat and eggs from DPB in the future. | 0.428 | 2.99|1.61 |
Factor 2: “Personal norms on animal welfare” (Cα: 0.870) | ||
I feel morally obliged to consider animal welfare in my daily behavior. | 0.811 | 2.65|1.50 |
I feel guilty buying meat and eggs where the day-old chicks were killed. | 0.807 | 3.59|2.00 |
People should do everything to improve animal welfare. | 0.719 | 2.00|1.25 |
I feel a moral obligation to buy DPB products (meat and eggs) regardless of what others do. | 0.682 | 3.09|1.69 |
I am ready to invest more time and money in purchasing chicken meat and eggs from DPB. | 0.522 | 3.22|1.75 |
I feel guilty if I buy chicken meat and eggs from other countries or regions. | 0.509 | 4.03|1.91 |
Factor 3: “Subjective norms” (Cα: 0.909) | ||
People who are important to me want me to buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | 0.892 | 4.24|1.70 |
People who are important to me think that I should buy products from DPB (eggs and meat). | 0.884 | 4.08|1.67 |
People whose opinions I value would prefer that I buy chicken and eggs from DPB. | 0.873 | 3.81|1.72 |
The positive opinion of my friends influences me to buy products from DPB (meat and eggs). | 0.763 | 4.25|1.74 |
Factor 4: “Personal norms on regional products” (Cα: 0.855) | ||
People should do everything possible to increase the consumption of regional products. | 0.810 | 2.22|1.29 |
I feel obliged to consider regional consumption in my daily behavior. | 0.803 | 2.69|1.60 |
I feel a moral obligation to buy products from this region, regardless of what others do. | 0.788 | 2.93|1.76 |
I feel guilty if I buy chicken meat and eggs from other countries or regions. | 0.521 | 4.03|1.91 |
Factor 5 “Perceived behavioral control” (Cα: 0.689) | ||
I know where I can buy chicken meat and eggs from DPB. | 0.840 | 5.11|1.95 |
Products from DPB (meat and eggs) are available in the shops where I usually go shopping. | 0.840 | 4.39|1.74 |
I see myself in a position to buy chicken meat and eggs from DPB in the future. | 0.522 | 2.99|1.61 |
Class 1 | Class 2 | Class 3 | |
---|---|---|---|
Size (%) | 22.8 | 20.0 | 57.2 |
Describing variables: Sociodemographic (%) | |||
Gender *** | |||
Female | 40.4 | 48.4 | 55.9 |
Male | 59.6 | 51.6 | 44.1 |
Age * | |||
18–24 years old | 8.5 | 6.0 | 9.9 |
25–39 years old | 27.2 | 10.3 | 21.8 |
40–64 years old | 38.0 | 55.4 | 41.5 |
65 or more years old | 26.3 | 28.3 | 26.8 |
Net income per month ** | |||
Less than 1300 EUR | 30.5 | 27.7 | 22.0 |
1300–2599 EUR | 36.2 | 45.1 | 38.5 |
2600–4999 EUR | 23.9 | 23.9 | 31.1 |
5000 EUR or more | 9.4 | 3.3 | 8.4 |
Describing variables: Purchase frequencies 1 (µ|σ) | |||
Organic products *** | 3.46 a|1.00 | 3.61 a|0.97 | 2.85 b|1.05 |
Regional products *** | 2.41 a|0.76 | 2.38 a|0.89 | 2.00 b|0.78 |
Products with “animal welfare” label *** | 3.06 a|0.91 | 3.23 a|0.94 | 2.66 b|0.93 |
Describing variables: Place of purchase (%) | |||
Discounter | 57.3 | 42.4 | 26.6 |
Supermarket | 35.2 | 47.8 | 50.3 |
Butcher | 2.3 | 2.2 | 8.6 |
Directly from the farmer | 0.9 | 0.5 | 3.2 |
Organic shop | 1.9 | 0 | 4.3 |
Farmer’s market | 2.3 | 2.7 | 5.8 |
Other | 0 | 4.3 | 1.3 |
Describing variables: Factors 2 (µ|σ) | |||
ATB *** | 2.57 a|0.93 | 3.01 b|1.22 | 2.28 c|1.04 |
PNAW *** | 3.70 a|1.26 | 3.72 a|1.32 | 2.63 b|1.15 |
SN *** | 4.13 a|1.49 | 4.60 b|1.46 | 3.90 a|1.50 |
PNR *** | 3.56 a|1.41 | 3.47 a|1.48 | 2.55 b|1.18 |
PBC *** | 4.29 a|1.23 | 4.70 b|1.32 | 3.92 c|1.42 |
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Escobedo del Bosque, C.I.; Spiller, A.; Risius, A. Who Wants Chicken? Uncovering Consumer Preferences for Produce of Alternative Chicken Product Methods. Sustainability 2021, 13, 2440. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052440
Escobedo del Bosque CI, Spiller A, Risius A. Who Wants Chicken? Uncovering Consumer Preferences for Produce of Alternative Chicken Product Methods. Sustainability. 2021; 13(5):2440. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052440
Chicago/Turabian StyleEscobedo del Bosque, Cynthia I., Achim Spiller, and Antje Risius. 2021. "Who Wants Chicken? Uncovering Consumer Preferences for Produce of Alternative Chicken Product Methods" Sustainability 13, no. 5: 2440. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052440
APA StyleEscobedo del Bosque, C. I., Spiller, A., & Risius, A. (2021). Who Wants Chicken? Uncovering Consumer Preferences for Produce of Alternative Chicken Product Methods. Sustainability, 13(5), 2440. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13052440