Title: The European Consumer and Nutrition Information on Label
1The European Consumer and Nutrition Information
on Label
Corvinus University May 5th 2009
Dr. Josephine M. Wills Director General European
Food Information Council Belgium www.eufic.org
Prof. Klaus G. Grunert MAPP Centre for Research
on Customer Relations in the Food
Sector University of Aarhus Denmark
2Main research questions
- How good is consumers nutrition knowledge?
- To what extent do consumers use nutrition labels
when shopping? - To what extent are consumers aware of different
labelling systems, understand them and are able
to use them?
3Basic study design
Observation at aisle (approx. 3 minutes per
shopper)
In-store Interview (approx. 5-7 minutes per
shopper)
In-home self-complete Questionnaire (approx.
30-40 minutes to complete)
- Looked at label and where
- Time spent choosing
- Number of products handled
- Whether respondent claims to have looked at
nutrition information on the label - Remembers any nutrition information from
the label - Which nutrition information looking for
- Time pressure during shopping
- Major determinants of choice (nutrition,
taste, convenience) - Some nutrition knowledge questions
- Nutrition knowledge questions
- Awareness, knowledge proficiency in using
nutrition labelling system (eg GDA, Health
logo, colour-coding, back of pack nutrition
table). - Background variables
- Demographics
- Health
4Methodology
- Pan-European study UK, France, Germany, Poland,
Sweden, Hungary - Fieldwork TNS for UK other countries -
Synovate, GfK, Pentor, Norstat, Corvinus
University/Focus Studio - Pilot studies UK (Nov 07, Jan/Feb 08) and
discussions with key stakeholders, nutritionists
and consumer scientists - Research in field February 2008 - February 2009
- Shoppers observed at 6 product categories
- salty snacks soft drinks yoghurts
- breakfast cereals ready meals confectionery
- Each country, sample size minimum 1800 in store
interviews, target 1080 in home questionnaires.
Incentivised. Over 11,600 in-store interviews,
over 5,700 in-home questionnaires returned
5Retailers labelling systems
Different retailers and nutrition labelling
systems. Good geographical spread
6How good is consumers nutrition knowledge?
7Nutrition knowledge Key conclusions
- Reasonably good knowledge about what experts
recommend, but tendency to exaggerate with regard
to foods to be avoided - Over 95 respondents knew experts recommend we
should eat more fruit and veg - Reasonable command of calories, including calorie
content of foods but a majority of consumers tend
to under-estimate calorie needs and calorie use - More than one third of respondents think children
need more calories than an adult man - Total fat, saturated fat, trans fat, and omega-3
are better understood than PUFA, MUFA - Starchy foods such as bread, rice, pasta and
potatoes are not well understood, less than 33
answering correctly that they should eat a lot of
these types of foods
8Nutrition knowledge index
Affects looking for NI in some countries,
awareness and understanding of systems, and
ability to use to make healthier choices
9To what extent do consumers use nutrition labels
when shopping?
10Handling of products Time spent
Respondents spend on average 30 secs per product
choice
seconds
- More than 60 of respondents look at front of
pack - Few respondents ( 15 ) look elsewhere on pack
- Majority spend most time looking at ready meal
category
11Main reasons for product choice
- Taste the main reason for product choice in all
product categories in Germany, Sweden, Hungary
and Poland - In France, family wants equally important for
breakfast cereals - In UK, convenience most important for ready
meals, health/nutrition most important for
breakfast cereals and yoghurts, taste for other
three categories
12What nutrition information did they look for?
- Calories most cited in 3 of 6 countries
- except UK and Germany (fat, then calories) and
Sweden (sugar, fat) - highest in Poland (66), lowest in Sweden (17)
- Fat among top 3 in all countries except Hungary
- Saturated fat, and salt, not among top 5 in any
country except UK - Sugar among top 5 in all countries
- Carbohydrates among top 5 in all countries except
UK and Poland - Other top 5 mentions Food additives (Hungary,
France, Poland), Fibre (Sweden), Protein
(Hungary), Vitamins (Poland), Organic (Germany)
13Did you look for any nutrition information on the
packaging?
Less than 27 said they looked for nutrition
information
- These figures are supported by respective
respondents being able to - name at least one nutrient and
- show where on the pack that info is found
14Where did they look for the nutrition information?
of respondents who said they have looked for NI
More likely to look for NI when product has
healthy image (yoghurt, cereals), and if better
nutrition knowledge
15To what extent are consumers aware of labelling
systems, understand them and are able to use them?
16Awareness and subjective understanding - GDA
heard of
seen before
FR,SE
Subjective understanding
DE (5.3)
PL (7.1)
extremely well
not at all
10
1
HU
UK
17Systems using colour-coded levels UK and France
Nutri-pass, a colour-coded GDA system
(Intermarché, France)
Examples of TL systems, UK
GDA/TL hybrid system, UK
18Awareness and subjective understanding colour
coding
- In UK, majority of shoppers say they have heard
of (79) or seen the TL system (81) - In France, minority of shoppers have heard of
(15) or seen (23) the colour coding system
(Nutri-pass) - Irrespective of awareness, subjective
understanding is high (6.7 in France, 6.9 in UK)
19Understanding of concept GDAs
Complete the sentence GDA indicates, as a
percentage of an adult's daily needs, the level
of nutrients ...
A In 100g of the food
B In a serving of the food
C Both of the above answers are correct
D None of these answers is correct
respondents
20Understanding of conceptGDAs
If a food label says the average adult guideline
daily amount for fat is 70 g, what do you think
this means?
Correct answer An average adult should eat no
more than 70 g fat a day
21Understanding of concept TL in UK
Q Which of the following statements do you think
best describes what each colour means?
The correct answer is indicated by the pattern
Note multiple answers marked, even though
instruction was to mark only one answer per colour
22Understanding of GDA label on one productUK
example
Q Which of the following statements applies to
this label?
Tesco/Sainsburys
Overall, 50-74 of shoppers were able to
correctly interpret GDA labels except for Poland
(34).
23Health inferences from actual product labels
Q Which of three products is the healthiest?
correct answers
- Highest correct answers
- better nutritional knowledge
- interest in healthy eating
- younger people
- Not related to
- gender
- social grade
24Health inference - choosing the healthier option
by comparison of 2 labels
Q Which is the healthier product?
correct answers
25Health inference - choosing the healthier option
by comparison of 3 GDA labels
- All systems in all countries yield similar
results - Choice of unhealthier product driven by high
calories, fat - High saturated fat less of an issue in other
countries - Very few in all countries identified high salt
product as least healthy (lt22)
Q Which is the healthiest/least healthy product?
UK example
26Food Labelling to Advance Better Education for
Life
- 7th Framework Programme
- Started 1 August 2008 (3 years)
27Overall objectives
- To determine how nutrition information on food
labels can affect dietary choices, consumer
habits and food-related health issues by
developing and applying an interpretation
framework incorporating both the label and other
factors/influences. - To provide the scientific basis on use of
nutrition information on food labels, including
scientific principles for assessing the impact of
different food labelling schemes.
28Penetration of nutrition information on food
labels in EU 27 and Turkey
- 27 EU countries plus Turkey
- 3 retailers per country
- Top 5, consumer cooperative/national, discounter
- Over 50 different retailers
- Physical audit of all products in 5 product
categories defined by consortium breakfast
cereals, carbonated soft drinks, yoghurt, ready
meals, sweet biscuits - More than 35,000 products
- Auditing period Sep 08 Apr 09
29Results Nutrition information
Nutrition information across 5 categories BOP/FOP
BOP
FOP
of products audited
85 average penetration of BOP nutrition
information of any kind (Hu 84) 48 average
penetration of FOP nutrition information of any
kind (Hu 41)
30Results Guideline Daily Amounts (GDA)
GDA across 5 categories BOP/FOP
BOP
FOP
of products audited
23 average penetration of BOP GDA labelling
(range 3-48) Hu 16 25 average penetration
of FOP GDA labelling (range 2-63) Hu 22
31Results Nutrition claims
Nutrition claims across 5 categories BOP/FOP
FOP
BOP
of products audited
20 average penetration of BOP nutrition claims
(range 6-31) Hu 9 25 average penetration of
FOP nutrition claims (range 12-37) Hu 15
32Results Health claims
Health claims across 5 categories BOP/FOP
FOP
BOP
of products audited
4 average penetration of BOP health claims
(range 1-8) Hu 3 2 average penetration of
FOP health claims (range 0-6) Hu 2
33Health logos
Health logos across 5 categories
FOP
BOP
of products audited
1 penetration of BOP health logos (range 0-9)
Hu 1 2 penetration of FOP health logos
(range 0-12) Hu 1
34Definition of health logos
- used on foods that fulfil certain nutrient
criteria (which vary from logo to logo) - representing a better-for-you option in a food
product category