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  • Publication
    Consumers' preferences for animal-source foods and retail outlets: The case of Tanzania
    (African Association of Agricultural Economists,Association Africaine des Agroeconomistes, 2016-09) ;
    Mtimet, Nadhem
    ;
    Pica-Ciamarra, Ugo
    ;
    Nsiima, Longin

    Growth in population and income, as well as urbanisation, are contributing to the growing consumption of high-value foods in developing countries. However, public and private investments targeting high-value agricultural markets are constrained by limited information on the quality dimensions of the market, the nature of traditional retail formats, and consumer segmentation. This paper presents a simple and appropriate methodology to provide such information, and applies it in Tanzania to animal-sourced foods. It features a rapid survey, which is then aligned with nationally representative survey data. The results show that Tanzanian consumers demand, and are anticipated to continue demanding, relatively good-quality animal products but in rather low-valued product forms. Consumer segments are differentiated by level of wealth and by choice of retail format and retail product form, rather than by quality per se.