Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data

Retail demand relationships for organic and non-organic bananas, garlic, onions, and potatoes are examined using scanner data from a retail co-operative food store located in Bozeman, Montana. A level version Rotterdam demand specification is used in a six-equation system to estimate Hicksian demand...

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Main Author: Trost, Daniel Roland
Language:en
Published: 1999
Online Access:http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1999/trost/TrostD1999.pdf
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spelling ndltd-MONTSTATE-http---etd.lib.montana.edu-etd-1999-trost-TrostD1999.pdf2012-07-03T13:19:55Z Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data Trost, Daniel Roland Retail demand relationships for organic and non-organic bananas, garlic, onions, and potatoes are examined using scanner data from a retail co-operative food store located in Bozeman, Montana. A level version Rotterdam demand specification is used in a six-equation system to estimate Hicksian demand elasticities. The own-price elasticity for organic onions is negative and significant. All other own-price elasticities are not significantly different from zero. This indicates consumers may not be very price sensitive for the goods in question. With few exceptions, the cross-price elasticities which are significant are also positive. Income elasticities are mostly significant and positive. Elasticity measurement may be somewhat imprecise due to a lack of variability in prices and an ambiguous error structure. Key factors influencing the quantities of the produce items purchased include the number of children in a household, the average age of adults in a household, and employment status of the primary grocery shopper. Educational status did not have any significant impact on quantities purchased. 1999-05-15 Thesis Montana State University en http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1999/trost/TrostD1999.pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description Retail demand relationships for organic and non-organic bananas, garlic, onions, and potatoes are examined using scanner data from a retail co-operative food store located in Bozeman, Montana. A level version Rotterdam demand specification is used in a six-equation system to estimate Hicksian demand elasticities. The own-price elasticity for organic onions is negative and significant. All other own-price elasticities are not significantly different from zero. This indicates consumers may not be very price sensitive for the goods in question. With few exceptions, the cross-price elasticities which are significant are also positive. Income elasticities are mostly significant and positive. Elasticity measurement may be somewhat imprecise due to a lack of variability in prices and an ambiguous error structure. Key factors influencing the quantities of the produce items purchased include the number of children in a household, the average age of adults in a household, and employment status of the primary grocery shopper. Educational status did not have any significant impact on quantities purchased.
author Trost, Daniel Roland
spellingShingle Trost, Daniel Roland
Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
author_facet Trost, Daniel Roland
author_sort Trost, Daniel Roland
title Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
title_short Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
title_full Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
title_fullStr Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
title_full_unstemmed Organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
title_sort organic produce demand estimation utilizing retail scanner data
publishDate 1999
url http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/1999/trost/TrostD1999.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT trostdanielroland organicproducedemandestimationutilizingretailscannerdata
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