1. Food-related consumer behaviours in times of crisis: Changes in the wake of the Ukraine war, rising prices and the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Grunert, Klaus G., Chimisso, Costanza, Lähteenmäki, Liisa, Leardini, Delphine, Sandell, Mari A., Vainio, Annukka, and Vranken, Liesbet
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CONSUMER behavior , *RUSSIAN invasion of Ukraine, 2022- , *COVID-19 pandemic , *PRICES , *PRICE sensitivity , *FOOD consumption , *FOOD deserts - Abstract
[Display omitted] • 81% of participants have changed food-related behaviours in the wake of the Ukraine war and rising prices. • Increased price sensitivity was most common change in the wake of the Ukraine war and rising prices. • 32% of participants reported more mindful food choices compared to pre-COVID-19. • Reported changes are in line with changes observed in 2020 in response to COPVID-19. When the COVID-19 pandemic subsided, the war in Ukraine led to further disruptions in consumers' daily behaviours, with rising prices for food and energy. We conducted a survey study on self-reported changes in food-related consumer behaviour in ten European countries and compared the results to a similar study conducted two years ago. A latent class cluster analysis distinguished five clusters and showed that different types of consumers can be distinguished based on how they react to the crisis as regards their eating habits. 19% of survey participants reported no major changes, and 32% reported changes mostly in terms of more price sensitivity. Among those that reported changes beyond reacting to higher prices, there are indications of more mindful eating and more deliberate choices. The changes already found earlier in response to the COVID-19 pandemic therefore seem to have been strengthened and supplemented by reactions to price increases. The results present a challenge to the food industry in terms of supplying healthy and sustainable food at affordable prices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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