The ethical consumer: an investigation into purchasing behaviour towards Fairtrade Coffee in Ireland
Abstract
The Fairtrade brand is experiencing high growth rates globally as demand for
ethically produced goods intensifies. This indicates that consumers have
identified the need to provide supplying countries with an honest return for their
labour. However, review of existing literature highlights the possibility that this
ethos may not be the sole influencer in the consumer purchasing process.
This study examines the internal and external factors that may affect consumer
purchasing behaviour for Fairtrade coffee in Ireland. Coffee is the most valuable
good traded for Fairtrade and also has a value to the global economy that is
second only to oil (Black Gold, 2006). Consideration of various influential
factors, which include demographics, price, branding and attitudes, identifies the
most significant relationships that exist within the selected sample.
A key finding from analysis of primary quantitative data, highlights that the
demographic profile of the Irish Fairtrade coffee consumer is reflective of that
reported by Svensson and Myhre (2012) for a sample of the Swedish population.
Despite this similarity however, variation exists within the factors that influence
each sample when purchasing Fairtrade coffee. Hypothesis testing reveals that a
number of hypotheses which were accepted for the Swedish sample do not hold
a level of significance within the Irish sample.
It is recognised that continued research is required nationally and internationally
to address the gap within existing literature in relation to this topic.
Collections
- MBS Theses [15]
- Theses - Business & Management [15]
The following license files are associated with this item: