In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness to accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods and willingness to pay (WTP) a premium for non-GM foods in order to assess their valuation on the non-GM characteristic in food products. Mean WTA is found to exceed mean WTP, suggesting the valuation of the non-GM characteristic reflects an endowment effect, imperfect substitutability between GM and non-GM foods, or both. Regression results show that perceived risks (benefits) associated with GM foods significantly increase (decrease) WTA and WTP estimates. Additional regression models using the difference between WTA and WTP as the dependent variable indicate that risk (benefit) perceptions increased (decreased) the discrepancy between WTA a...
The introduction and communication of new technologies in the food industries has given rise in the ...
This paper presents estimates of consumers' willingness to pay for a GM food and non-food product ba...
The dichotomy between perceptions of the acceptability of risk associated with genetically modified ...
In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness to accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods a...
In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness to accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods a...
In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness-to-accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods a...
Our research elicited UK consumers¡¯ willingness-to-accept (WTA) discount in exchange for giving up ...
This study uses consumer survey data collected in the United States (US) and United Kingdom (UK) to ...
Employing contingent valuation method (CVM), the study explores whether or not consumers risk/benefi...
Using Heckman's sample selection model, consumer willingness-to-pay (accept) premium (discount) for ...
Most of the existing literature deals with consumer willingness to pay for GM-free food, or consumer...
Our study uses contingent valuation survey data (WTA and WTP) collected in the UK to examine consume...
While Genetically Modified (GM) crops and foods are in production and on the shelves of supermarkets...
This paper investigates Willingness to Accept (WTA) Genetic Modification (GM) foods based on experim...
The dichotomy between perceptions of the acceptability of risk associated with genetically modified ...
The introduction and communication of new technologies in the food industries has given rise in the ...
This paper presents estimates of consumers' willingness to pay for a GM food and non-food product ba...
The dichotomy between perceptions of the acceptability of risk associated with genetically modified ...
In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness to accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods a...
In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness to accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods a...
In a survey of UK consumers, we elicited their willingness-to-accept (WTA) a discount for GM foods a...
Our research elicited UK consumers¡¯ willingness-to-accept (WTA) discount in exchange for giving up ...
This study uses consumer survey data collected in the United States (US) and United Kingdom (UK) to ...
Employing contingent valuation method (CVM), the study explores whether or not consumers risk/benefi...
Using Heckman's sample selection model, consumer willingness-to-pay (accept) premium (discount) for ...
Most of the existing literature deals with consumer willingness to pay for GM-free food, or consumer...
Our study uses contingent valuation survey data (WTA and WTP) collected in the UK to examine consume...
While Genetically Modified (GM) crops and foods are in production and on the shelves of supermarkets...
This paper investigates Willingness to Accept (WTA) Genetic Modification (GM) foods based on experim...
The dichotomy between perceptions of the acceptability of risk associated with genetically modified ...
The introduction and communication of new technologies in the food industries has given rise in the ...
This paper presents estimates of consumers' willingness to pay for a GM food and non-food product ba...
The dichotomy between perceptions of the acceptability of risk associated with genetically modified ...