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Antecedents of consumers’ purchase intention towards organic food: Integration of theory of planned behavior and protection motivation theory

Antecedents of consumers’ purchase intention towards organic food: Integration of theory of planned behavior and protection motivation theory
Antecedents of consumers’ purchase intention towards organic food: Integration of theory of planned behavior and protection motivation theory

Before consequences of climate change continue to intensify and increasingly affect the entire planet, immediate action must be taken. For instance, adopt the pro-environmental behaviors such as purchase of organic food to minimize the harmful human-caused impacts to the environment. This paper aims to determine the factors that influence the purchase intention of organic food in Malaysia by applying the theory of planned behavior and the protection motivation theory. A total of 300 questionnaires were collected and PLS-SEM was employed to test the structural relationships. Consequences of climate change and health threats were not the primary concerns among Malaysians when deciding whether to purchase organic food. Results show that perceived vulnerability, response efficacy, self-efficacy, subjective norm, and attitude affect purchase intention towards organic food. Consumers were more likely to have positive attitude towards organic food when they have adequate information on vulnerability of a threat and its consequences. The findings provide insights on the antecedents and outcomes of purchase intention towards organic food particularly in Malaysia. Although predictive power of perceived factors such as perceived rewards and perceived efficacy have been extensively researched in the past, there are limited studies that integrate both theories that simultaneously investigate antecedents of consumers’ purchase intention towards organic food.

Attitudes, Climate change, Malaysia, Mediator, Organic food, Protection motivation theory, Purchase intention, Response efficacy, Subjective norm, Theory of planned behavior
2071-1050
Pang, Suk Min
ba782319-08fa-4782-8ebe-e680ec02fdfc
Tan, Booi Chen
fa3e448e-258e-4bf2-9850-ee7488242fd6
Lau, Teck Chai
09c52537-548e-4a3a-a596-1116c28f23c2
Pang, Suk Min
ba782319-08fa-4782-8ebe-e680ec02fdfc
Tan, Booi Chen
fa3e448e-258e-4bf2-9850-ee7488242fd6
Lau, Teck Chai
09c52537-548e-4a3a-a596-1116c28f23c2

Pang, Suk Min, Tan, Booi Chen and Lau, Teck Chai (2021) Antecedents of consumers’ purchase intention towards organic food: Integration of theory of planned behavior and protection motivation theory. Sustainability (Switzerland), 13 (9), [5218]. (doi:10.3390/su13095218).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Before consequences of climate change continue to intensify and increasingly affect the entire planet, immediate action must be taken. For instance, adopt the pro-environmental behaviors such as purchase of organic food to minimize the harmful human-caused impacts to the environment. This paper aims to determine the factors that influence the purchase intention of organic food in Malaysia by applying the theory of planned behavior and the protection motivation theory. A total of 300 questionnaires were collected and PLS-SEM was employed to test the structural relationships. Consequences of climate change and health threats were not the primary concerns among Malaysians when deciding whether to purchase organic food. Results show that perceived vulnerability, response efficacy, self-efficacy, subjective norm, and attitude affect purchase intention towards organic food. Consumers were more likely to have positive attitude towards organic food when they have adequate information on vulnerability of a threat and its consequences. The findings provide insights on the antecedents and outcomes of purchase intention towards organic food particularly in Malaysia. Although predictive power of perceived factors such as perceived rewards and perceived efficacy have been extensively researched in the past, there are limited studies that integrate both theories that simultaneously investigate antecedents of consumers’ purchase intention towards organic food.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 1 May 2021
Published date: 7 May 2021
Keywords: Attitudes, Climate change, Malaysia, Mediator, Organic food, Protection motivation theory, Purchase intention, Response efficacy, Subjective norm, Theory of planned behavior

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 455507
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455507
ISSN: 2071-1050
PURE UUID: f1c4c362-d1a8-49e6-8fc4-8059789426f5

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Date deposited: 24 Mar 2022 17:32
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 12:31

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Contributors

Author: Suk Min Pang
Author: Booi Chen Tan
Author: Teck Chai Lau

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