4.6 Article

Food Labels (Quality, Origin, and Sustainability): The Experience of Czech Producers

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13010318

Keywords

food labeling schemes; sustainability labels; quality labels; labels origin; Czech food producers

Funding

  1. IGS College of Polytechnics in Jihlava, Regionalni znaeni jako konkurenni vyhoda
  2. IGA PEF ZU, Atributy izeni alternativnich business modelu v produkci potravin [2019B0006]

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This study aimed to explore Czech food producers' expectations and experiences with selected food labels, finding that they had positive evaluations of marketing communication effects, but their expectations exceeded their actual experiences.
Food labels allow producers to promote the unique selling points of their products and help consumers buy products with value-adding qualities. The aim of the present article is hence to explore Czech food producers' expectations and experience with selected food labels. The selection was narrowed down to enterprises that had succeeded in the certification processes within the food labeling systems of European quality and origin labels (protected designation of origin (PDO), protected geographical indication (PGI), and traditional specialty guaranteed (TSG)), as well as schemes that fall under the remit of the Ministry of Agriculture of the Czech Republic, such as Klasa (Ceska potravina/Czech food, Regionalni potravina/regional food, and BIO). The research was made using an online questionnaire in January-February 2018, and was focused on determining possible discrepancies in expectations that the companies had before applying for quality/origin labels and their actual experience with the labelling systems, the benefits they had gained, and their overall experience with the labels. To compare the respondents' expectations and their actual experience, both the non-parametric Wilcoxon test and t-test were used. The results show that the respondents positively evaluated the effects of marketing communication, but their expectations had been higher than what they experienced.

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