The retail market prices of fonio reveal the demand for quality characteristics in Bamako, Mali
2007
Dury, Sandrine | Meuriot, Véronique | Fliedel, Geneviève | Blancher, Sandy | Bore Guindo, Fanta | Drame, Djibril | Bricas, Nicolas | Diakite, Lamissa | Cruz, Jean-François | European Association of Agricultural Economists
African consumers’ expectations concerning quality of food products are great. In spite of constrained budgets, we showed that market retailed prices revealed quality preferences of the consumers and not only production costs. In very poor countries like Mali, food innovation is limited by the very low purchasing power of the population. However, technological food product or process innovations are possible and sometimes valuable. Demand driven innovation may lead to open new markets, opportunities for small and medium scale enterprises and to improve consumers’welfare. Based on this assumption, technical research was done to provide new food products. In this paper, using both sensory test and a hedonic price approach, we estimated consumer demandfor different characteristics of fonio, a West African cereal, and showed that poor consumers do have quality requirements and actually pay for it. We showed that the shadow or hedonic price paid for quality characteristics is small but significant. A comparison of sensory test and market studyshowed a convergence between what people say they prefer and what they really pay for. Results were consistent and showed directions for technological improvement of the product and its production process. The Partial Least Square method was used to estimate hedonic prices of the different modalities of fonio quality traits. This method was interesting since it solved the Ordinary Least Square method’s colinearity problems.
Show more [+] Less [-]AGROVOC Keywords
Bibliographic information
This bibliographic record has been provided by Fundamental Library of Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies