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Research article2017Peer reviewed

Consumer perceptions and willingness to pay for cassava-wheat composite bread in Ghana A hedonic pricing approach

Owusu, Victor; Owusu-Sekyere, Enoch; Donkor, Emmanuel; Darkwaah, Nana Ama; Adomako-Boateng, Derrick, Jr.

Abstract

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to evaluate consumers' willingness to pay (WTP) for composite flour bread produced with a blend of 15-40 per cent cassava flour blended with wheat flour in Ghana.Design/methodology/approach - The analysis is based on interviews with 350 consumers in the Ashanti and Eastern Regions of Ghana to assess their awareness, perceptions and WTP for cassava-wheat composite bread. From these consumer interviews, a hedonic regression model was applied to evaluate consumers' WTP for various attributes of composite flour bread. Price-related and health-related perceptions of consumers on cassava-wheat composite bread were investigated with perception indices. Multi-attribute preference-based contingent ratings that rate product attributes in terms of importance to consumers was employed. The implicit prices of the product attributes representing the contribution of the product attributes to the WTP amount were also computed.Findings - The paper finds that consumers who are aware of cassava-blended flour bread and who like its taste and texture are willing to pay more than consumers who are unaware. This leads to a policy recommendation advocating increased advertising of the economic and nutritional benefits of cassava-wheat blended composite flour bread.Research limitations/implications - Future studies should explore the choice experiments to examine preferences for the food product.Originality/value - This paper evaluates consumers' WTP for composite flour bread produced with a blend of 15-40 per cent cassava flour and wheat flour. Given widespread reliance on imported wheat flour and the simultaneously large volumes of locally available cassava, it is important to consider opportunities for import substitution (and possible cost reduction for consumers) of blended flour products such as cassava-wheat composite flours. Nigeria has imposed a 10 per cent blending requirement for this reason. Ghana has taken important measures recently for the development of high-quality cassava flour, and so research on its potential and actual uptake is welcomed and highly relevant to food security and agribusiness development.

Keywords

Ghana; Hedonic pricing model; Consumer perceptions; Composite bread; Willingness to pay

Published in

Journal of Agribusiness in Developing and Emerging Economies
2017, Volume: 7, number: 2, pages: 115-134

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Economics

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/JADEE-11-2014-0044

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/123623