Concerns about food are especially convoluted right now. Almost all
(99%) of our shoppers say they are concerned about food quality, and
quality concerns have become inseparable from concerns about safety and
health. Green, organic, safe, quality, healthy, and gourmet are all part
of the stew. Many consumers have heard enough news about safety
breakdowns, lax regulations, China imports, and questionable organic
label credibility to be convinced that food quality isn't as good
as they thought it was and think it should be. At the same time, they
are concerned about prices of organic as well as traditional foods, and
fresh as well as processed. One of our shoppers writes: "Without
labeling where it's from, we don't know if some of our food is
coming from China along with our toys and clothes. And that could be
really awful."
As that comment suggests, most of our shoppers don't know that
foods other than shrimp have been imported from China to the U.S. Media
stories about the lead problems with toys made in China reached many
more consumers than stories about fish and seafood imports, but the
heightened level of concern is easy to understand, as is the report that
a "China-free" label increased supplement sales fourfold. A
Consumer Reports poll found 92% of its readers in favor of mandated
labels. Among our smaller but broader cross section of shoppers, the
percent is lower, but the concern is still up there.
The breadth of current concern about food quality is also
attributable to the widespread weather problems that led to winter
disappointments with citrus and summer disappointments with stone
fruits. "To get quality food, you have to go to Whole Foods or one
of the really good steak houses." Steak restaurants and Whole Foods
are major beneficiaries of the feeling that quality food is the
exception rather than the rule in today's marketplace. In response,
food brands are seeking ways to increase the quality perceptions of
their major products.
Our high numbers on current concern about food quality and safety
seem to be in conflict with the numbers in this year's FMI Grocery
Shopper Trends, which reported that "66% of consumers describe
themselves as 'completely' or 'somewhat' confident
in the safety of supermarket food." We don't know how that
breaks down between completely and somewhat: Being only "somewhat
confident" is a lot less than being "completely
confident." If the completely/somewhat split in FMI's numbers
was 50/50, only 33% were completely confident and 67% who were less than
completely confident, and our concern numbers are not so different.
Organic percentages in both of the tables on the following page are
underscored by the fast growth and broad acceptance of store brand
organics. Consumers who are frustrated by the high prices of organics
and the conflicting reports on organic label credibility feel that they
might as well buy the store brand.
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