Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention

This paper aims to identify service quality dimensions of street food that have an impact on utilitarian and hedonic values and to determine the effect of utilitarian and hedonic values on repurchase intention. It also examines the moderating effect of risk perception toward street food safety on th...

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Main Authors: Kyung Hwa Seo, Jee Hye Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/13/6826
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spelling doaj-c148bbf18e884c0882bfbd044721e6f32021-07-15T15:34:39ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1661-78271660-46012021-06-01186826682610.3390/ijerph18136826Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase IntentionKyung Hwa Seo0Jee Hye Lee1Department of Hotel Culinary Arts and Bakery, Ulsan College, 101 Bongsu-ro, Dong-gu, Ulsan 44022, KoreaDepartment of Food & Nutrition, College of Human Ecology, University of Ulsan, 93 Daehak-ro, Ulsan 44610, KoreaThis paper aims to identify service quality dimensions of street food that have an impact on utilitarian and hedonic values and to determine the effect of utilitarian and hedonic values on repurchase intention. It also examines the moderating effect of risk perception toward street food safety on the relationship between service quality and perceived value. An Internet survey was performed in Korea with 285 respondents. The results confirmed that the five dimensions of street food’s service quality—food quality, employee service, physical environment, price, and rapidity of service—had positive impacts on utilitarian and hedonic values. All perceived value (utilitarian, hedonic) has an impact on repurchase intention. Finally, the food quality of street food showed a stronger influence on utilitarian value among the low-risk perception group than the high-risk perception group depending on the consumers’ level of awareness of food safety. This provides new insights for marketing strategies to attract domestic/foreign consumers to street food vendors and for creating a new food culture by emphasizing important domains of service quality, the relation of quality to consumer values, and risk perception toward food safety in street food.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/13/6826street foodservice qualityutilitarian valuehedonic valuerisk perception
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kyung Hwa Seo
Jee Hye Lee
spellingShingle Kyung Hwa Seo
Jee Hye Lee
Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
street food
service quality
utilitarian value
hedonic value
risk perception
author_facet Kyung Hwa Seo
Jee Hye Lee
author_sort Kyung Hwa Seo
title Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention
title_short Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention
title_full Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention
title_fullStr Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Risk Perception toward Food Safety in Street Food: The Relationships among Service Quality, Values, and Repurchase Intention
title_sort understanding risk perception toward food safety in street food: the relationships among service quality, values, and repurchase intention
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1661-7827
1660-4601
publishDate 2021-06-01
description This paper aims to identify service quality dimensions of street food that have an impact on utilitarian and hedonic values and to determine the effect of utilitarian and hedonic values on repurchase intention. It also examines the moderating effect of risk perception toward street food safety on the relationship between service quality and perceived value. An Internet survey was performed in Korea with 285 respondents. The results confirmed that the five dimensions of street food’s service quality—food quality, employee service, physical environment, price, and rapidity of service—had positive impacts on utilitarian and hedonic values. All perceived value (utilitarian, hedonic) has an impact on repurchase intention. Finally, the food quality of street food showed a stronger influence on utilitarian value among the low-risk perception group than the high-risk perception group depending on the consumers’ level of awareness of food safety. This provides new insights for marketing strategies to attract domestic/foreign consumers to street food vendors and for creating a new food culture by emphasizing important domains of service quality, the relation of quality to consumer values, and risk perception toward food safety in street food.
topic street food
service quality
utilitarian value
hedonic value
risk perception
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/18/13/6826
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