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Hedonic myopia: Emphasizing hedonic benefits of non-perishable food makes consumers insensitive to expiration dates in food purchase

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  • Choi, Kang Jun
  • Jia, He Michael
  • Lee, Jae Young
  • Kim, B. Kyu
  • Kim, Keunwoo

Abstract

Although the expiration date of non-perishable food only indicates whether the food is still in its peak quality, consumers tend to misinterpret the meaning of the expiration date and thus avoid purchasing near-expiry food. Due to such aversion to food close to expiration dates, a huge amount of non-perishable food is wasted due to being unsold and thus uneaten every year. The current research explores a novel solution to mitigate consumers' aversion to near-expiry non-perishable food at the purchase stage. Drawing on the literature on consumer impatience, we propose a hedonic myopia hypothesis. Specifically, when hedonic (vs. utilitarian) benefits of non-perishable food are emphasized, consumers desire to consume it immediately and disregard delayed consequences. Hence, they become less averse to near-expiry food. We find convergent support for the hedonic myopia hypothesis and the impatience-based mechanism through various methods, including an analysis of actual sales data from an online store, a field experiment, and a randomized controlled experiment. The demonstrated hedonic myopia effect provides important theoretical and practical implications.

Suggested Citation

  • Choi, Kang Jun & Jia, He Michael & Lee, Jae Young & Kim, B. Kyu & Kim, Keunwoo, 2022. "Hedonic myopia: Emphasizing hedonic benefits of non-perishable food makes consumers insensitive to expiration dates in food purchase," Journal of Business Research, Elsevier, vol. 138(C), pages 193-202.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:jbrese:v:138:y:2022:i:c:p:193-202
    DOI: 10.1016/j.jbusres.2021.09.005
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