‘Plant-based’ beats vegetarian and vegan

   

La Trobe University research published in Appetite last week, shows a preference for the term ‘plant-based’ over ‘vegetarian’ and ‘vegan’ on food labels.

The research – conducted among US and German consumers – examined the impact of plant-based, vegan and vegetarian labels on participant appraisals of how healthy, tasty, environmentally friendly, ethical and pure a range of foods were perceived to be.

The study included foods that are traditionally fully animal-derived, such as cheese or sausages and foods that may contain small amounts or no animal-sourced ingredients, such as pasta, chocolate and cookies.

Lead researcher, Dr Matthew Ruby, said that both US and German participants showed a preference for foods labelled ‘plant-based’, rating them as tastier and ‘purer’ and indicated they were more likely to buy them over the same foods labelled ‘vegan’ or ‘vegetarian’.

“While our US participants also believed the plant-based foods were healthier, more ethical and more environmentally friendly than the other labels, our German participants did not make the same connection,” Dr Ruby said.

“This is perhaps because vegetarian and vegan labelling is more widespread in Germany, on both healthier whole food products and heavily processed foods.”

‘Anticipated taste’ was the main predictor of how likely participants would be to purchase the food products, however perceptions of how ethical and pure the foods were also mattered to consumers. This was the case both for those who carefully read food labels when shopping and those who did not.

This research was conducted following calls for research on how to promote plant-based food products to appeal to larger numbers of consumers and may be used to help plant-based food manufacturers improve their product marketing.

The research is available to read in detail, here.


Know someone who should read this? Share the article.