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Consumers’ experiences and preferences for plant-based meat food: Evidence from a choice experiment in four cities of China
WANG Ge, Madison T PLASTER, Bai Yun-li, LIU Cheng-fang
2023, 22 (1): 306-319.   DOI: 10.1016/j.jia.2022.09.008
Abstract247)      PDF in ScienceDirect      

This paper examined consumers’ experiences in and preferences for plant-based meat (PBM) food and their respective correlates, based on data from an online survey of 579 consumers in four major cities in China in early 2021.  We first described consumers’ experiences in consuming and purchasing PBM food and their correlates, and then analyzed consumer preferences using hypothetical choice experiment.  The experiment offered consumers various options to purchase burgers made from PBM or animal-based meat (ABM), combined with different countries of origin (COO), taste labels, and prices.  Our data showed that respondents hold overall positive attitudes toward PBM food; 85 and 82% of respondents reported experience in eating and purchasing PBM food, respectively.  More than half of them ate PBM food because they wanted to try new food (58%), or were interested in healthy food (56%).  Income, religion, and dietary restrictions were significantly correlated with consumers’ experiences in PBM food consumption.  Results from the Random Parameter Logit Model based on the hypothetical choice experiment data showed that 79% of respondents chose PBM burgers and were willing to pay an average of 88 CNY for a PBM burger.  We also found that 99.8 and 83% of respondents are willing to buy burgers made in China and those with a taste label, with a willingness to pay (WTP) of 208 and 120 CNY, respectively.  The heterogeneity test revealed that females and those with at least a bachelor’s degree, higher income, religious beliefs, and dietary restrictions are more likely to buy PBM burgers than their counterparts

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Status and path of intergenerational transmission of poverty in rural China: A human capital investment perspective
BAI Yun-li, ZHANG Lin-xiu, SUN Ming-xing, XU Xiang-bo
2021, 20 (4): 1080-1091.   DOI: 10.1016/S2095-3119(20)63373-1
Abstract194)      PDF in ScienceDirect      
This paper focused on the intergenerational transmission of poverty in rural China by estimating the intergenerational transmission of earnings and stated its mechanism from the perspective of human capital investment before children participated in the labor market.  The data used in this study were longitude data collected in 2 000 households of 100 villages among 25 counties across five provinces in 2005, 2008, 2012, 2016, and 2019.  Qualitative and quantitative methods were adopted.  We found a significant intergenerational transmission of earnings in rural China, especially for the pairs of father–children and parents–children.  The intergenerational earnings’ elasticities were much less than those in urban areas, which indicated better social mobility in rural areas than that in urban China.  The children with parents who could earn much were more likely to be invested before they participated in the labor market, gain a high education and have more skills.  Three cases further showed that the mechanism of human capital investment in children breaking the intergenerational transmission of poverty and promoting social mobility.
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