Household Preference Heterogeneity for Organic and Fairtrade Yellow Chilli in Lima, Peru [Resumen]
Abstract
Certifying agricultural goods as organic and Fairtrade opens up two niche markets with potential
benefits for both the environment and farmers in developing countries. Those certifications are expanding among farmers with access to external markets, but not among marginal farmers supplying
internal markets in Peru. Those latter farmers state that national consumers are not willing to pay
differential prices for certified products. In this research, we used a choice experiment to evaluate
household marginal willingness to pay (mWTP) for three Organic and Fairtrade certification attributes: environmental protection, product without pesticides, and improvement in the quality of
life of farmers. Yellow chilli was used as case study, because it is widely used for food preparation
in Lima, Peru.
How to cite
García-Yi, J., García, A., & Grote, U. (2011). Household Preference Heterogeneity for Organic and Fairtrade Yellow Chilli in Lima, Peru [Resumen]. En W. Amelung, F. Asch, R. Birner, J. von Braun, G. Cadisch, M. Denich... H. Waibe (Eds.), Development on the margin Book of abstracts (p. 75). Tropentag 2011 International Research on Food Security, Natural Resource Management and Rural Development. Germany: German Institute for Agriculture in the Tropics and Subtropics. Resumen recuperado de http://www.tropentag.de/2011/proceedings/proceedings.pdfPublisher
German Institute for Agriculture in the Tropics and SubtropicsCategory / Subcategory
Ciencias empresariales / MarketingSubject
Collections
- Marketing [8]
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