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The Demand for Food Quality in Rural China

Xiaohua Yu () and David Abler

American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 2009, vol. 91, issue 1, pages 57-69

Abstract: Many studies of food demand do not use actual prices but unit values, obtained by dividing expenditures by the quantity consumed. This can bias empirical analyses because unit values are not exogenous market prices; they reflect household food quality choices within each food category. This article develops a framework for assessing the resulting bias in income and price elasticities of demand and applies the framework to data for rural China. Empirical results indicate that households in rural China tend to consume higher-quality food as income increases, with a greater sensitivity to income for basic foods than for luxury foods. Copyright Copyright 2008 Agricultural and Applied Economics Association.

Date: 2009

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American Journal of Agricultural Economics is edited by Peter Berck, Robert J. Myers, Ian M. Sheldon and B. Wade Brorsen

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