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  4. Understanding and tackling meat reduction in different cultural contexts: a segmentation study of Swiss and Vietnamese consumers
 

Understanding and tackling meat reduction in different cultural contexts: a segmentation study of Swiss and Vietnamese consumers

URI
https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/36928
Version
Published
Date Issued
2024
Author(s)
Götze, Franziska  
Delley, Mathilde  
Ha, Thanh Mai
Markoni, Evelyn  
Ngo, Minh Hai
Nguyen, Anh Duc
Bui, Thi Lam
Le, Nhu Thinh
Pham, Bao Duong
Brunner, Thomas  
Type
Article
Language
English
Subjects

segmentation

consumer behaviour

Switzerland

Vietnam

meat consumption

reduction

emerging economies

Abstract
Objective: This study aims to disclose and compare meat consumer segments in Switzerland and Vietnam, which differ in terms of their socioeconomic and cultural settings (the former is a developed country, and the latter is an emerging one) to develop a set of segment-specific recommendations that might be applied to consumption in comparable contexts, that is, in other developed countries and other emerging economies.
Methods: Data were collected through two online surveys: one for Swiss residents from randomly selected households and one for Vietnamese urban residents recruited via snowball sampling. The final sample size was N = 643 for Switzerland and N = 616 for Vietnam. Hierarchical cluster analyses followed by K-means cluster analyses revealed five distinct clusters in both countries.
Results: Three clusters were common to both countries: meat lovers (21% in Switzerland and 19% in Vietnam), proactive consumers (22% in Switzerland and 14% in Vietnam) and suggestible consumers (19% in Switzerland and 25% in Vietnam). Two were specific to each country, namely traditional (19%) and basic (21%) consumers in Switzerland and confident (16%) and anxious (26%) consumers in Vietnam.
Conclusion: Relying on voluntary actions, nudging techniques, private initiatives and consumers’ sense of responsibility will certainly be useful but will nevertheless be insufficient to achieve a planetary health diet within the given timeframe (the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development). Governments will have no choice but to activate all levers within their sphere of influence – including regulatory measures – and oblige private sector actors to commit to the measures imposed on them. A binding international agenda with common objectives and measures is a judicious approach. Unlike most previous studies, which focused on meat consumption intensity and frequency or diet type to segment consumers, our approach, based on psychographic profiles, allows the identification of segments that share common drivers and barriers and thus the development of better-targeted measures to reduce meat consumption.
Subjects
H Social Sciences (General)
DOI
10.24451/arbor.21811
https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.21811
Publisher DOI
10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1286579
Journal
Frontiers in Psychology
ISSN
1664-1078
Publisher URL
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/psychology/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1286579/full
Organization
Hochschule für Agrar-, Forst- und Lebensmittelwissenschaften  
Konsumentenorientierte Lebensmittelproduktion  
Lebensmittelwirtschaft und Konsum  
Nachhaltigkeitsbewertung von Lebensmittelsystemen  
Konsumentenverhalten  
Sponsors
Swiss National Science Foundation
National Foundation for Science and Technology Development
Volume
15
Publisher
Frontiers Research Foundation
Submitter
Götze, Franziska
Citation apa
Götze, F., Delley, M., Ha, T. M., Markoni, E., Ngo, M. H., Nguyen, A. D., Bui, T. L., Le, N. T., Pham, B. D., & Brunner, T. (2024). Understanding and tackling meat reduction in different cultural contexts: a segmentation study of Swiss and Vietnamese consumers. In Frontiers in Psychology (Vol. 15). Frontiers Research Foundation. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.21811
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