Study: Consumers Prefer U.S.-Grown Organic Broccoli

UF/IFAS researchers conducted a national online survey in 2010 in which they posed questions about organic broccoli to 348 participants. They wanted to know the impact of Country of Origin Labeling on the price people were willing to pay for organic broccoli.

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piece of broccoli

Some consumers remain confused about whether the broccoli they’re buying meets U.S. government standards for organic products, said Zhifeng Gao, a UF associate professor of food and resource economics.

“This information is important because consumers, in theory, can get both organic and country-of-origin information in the same supermarket,” Gao said.

It’s also key for organic producers. “This is important for the U.S. organic industry to decide appropriate strategies to compete with foreign organic industries.”

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For example, knowing this new data, the U.S. organic industry could put more emphasis on the products’ country of origin, he said. Consumers would then, at least theoretically, pay more attention to that information, he said.

As part of the survey, researchers added twists, such as USDA organic labeling information. One group received information about organic food vs. conventional food. Another group received no information about U.S. organic labeling requirements.

Participants who received the organic labeling information read this statement: “The USDA requirements for organic certification are extensive. The term ‘organic’ can only be used to describe an agricultural product sold in the U.S. if it meets all of these requirements. No matter where a product is produced, the same rules and procedures apply.”

Gao and his colleagues chose broccoli because it’s very popular and is produced in the U.S. and abroad in fairly equal amounts. In fact, organic farming in general is one of the fastest-growing segments of global agriculture during the past decade. In the U.S., organic product sales went up 9.5% from 2010 to 2011, reaching $31.5 billion in America. Imported fresh broccoli has increased dramatically since 2000. In 2010, the U.S. imported about 25 million pounds of fresh broccoli from Mexico.

Survey results are published in the online journal Agricultural Economics.

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