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Assessing the demand for phytosterol-enriched products

Phytosterol is a healthful ingredient that helps reduce blood cholesterol levels. It has
been over ten years since the first phytosterol-enriched product, Benecol margarine, was
launched in Finland in 1995; however, understanding of this product is still limited. In
addition, it has been shown in the literature that health-related concerns have an
influence on consumers’ decisions to consume harmful or beneficial ingredients.
This study estimates the demand for three phytosterol-enriched products in
the categories of margarine, orange juice and yogurt. The objectives of this study are
(1) to estimate price and expenditure elasticities for phytosterol-enriched brands and
comparative non-phytosterol brands, (2) to identify cannibalization effects with a
proposed methodology, and, (3) to estimate the welfare effects associated with the
introduction of a product.
Subsuming LA/AIDS, Rotterdam, CBS and NBR demand systems, the
Barten synthetic demand system is applied to margarine weekly scanner data.
Phytosterol-enriched margarine brands (Benecol and Take Control) commanded
significantly higher prices relative to other margarine brands. Strong substitutability among the phytosterol brands was evident as suggested by the statistically significant
and relatively large compensated cross-price elasticities.
Cannibalization is defined as the competition between products offered by
the same firm. Cannibalization studies are important to multi-product firms because they
provide insights into the benefits of offering product variety. In addition, the
identification and assessment of cannibalization are integral factors for strategic
decisions of new product introductions. However, there are no standard measures to
identify its effects. We use the Barten synthetic demand system along with two
conventional measures to illustrate that the use of cross-price elasticities derived from a
flexible demand system is a viable alternative to identify cannibalization effects.
The third objective analyzes the consumer welfare effects associated with a
new functional food product introduction. Using the Barten synthetic model and pre- and
post-introduction scanner data, we estimate direct price and variety effects associated
with the introduction of a new functional food product (i.e., phytosterol-enriched
product). With post-introduction data and an assumed demand structure, we also
estimate indirect price effects. Our results suggest notable welfare effects consisting of a
relatively small price effect and a large variety effect.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1031
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsYuan, Yan
ContributorsCapps Jr., Oral, Nayga Jr., Rudolfo M.
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

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