Share

Export Citation

APA
MLA
Chicago
Harvard
Vancouver
BIBTEX
RIS
Universitas Hasanuddin
Research output:Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Preliminary investigations indicate that the lack of growth in Indonesian goat consumption is linked to negative perceptions of goat meat

Murray-Prior R.

Animal Production Science

Q2
Published: 2013

Abstract

The present paper discusses goat consumption by consumers in Makassar, Indonesia, on the basis of interviews with households from April to May 2009, using a survey that included questions on criteria for purchasing meat, attitudes to goat meat, goat and goat-meat purchases and consumption, and demographics of the respondents. Consumers rarely bought goat or goat meat for family, visitors or gifts and most commonly bought it for religious and birth ceremonies. Cluster analysis identified four consumer segments that were not significantly correlated with demographic variables but were with purchasing patterns and the likelihood of increasing consumption. The evidence supports the hypothesis that goat meat is consumed mainly for cultural ceremonies and that the reason for the lack of growth in consumption of goat meat is negative perceptions of many consumers about its effects on their health.

Access to Document

10.1071/AN12093

Other files and links

Fingerprint

Consumption (sociology)Sciences
IndonesianSciences
PurchasingSciences
DemographicsSciences
BusinessSciences
SocioeconomicsSciences
Agricultural scienceSciences
BiologySciences
MarketingSciences
DemographySciences
EconomicsSciences
Social scienceSciences
LinguisticsSciences
SociologySciences
PhilosophySciences