The role of trust and perceived risk on Muslim behavior in buying halal-certified food

IF 3.1 Q2 BUSINESS
Hardius Usman, Nucke Widowati Kusumo Projo, Chairy Chairy, Marissa Grace Haque
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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study to examine the factors that encourage/inhibit Muslim behavior in buying halal-certified food (HCF), based on two theories, the knowledge-attitude-behavior model and the attitude-behavior-context model; and study the impact of trust and perceived risk on Muslim behavior in buying HCF, and their role in moderating the relationship between halal awareness and religious commitment with Muslim behavior in buying HCF.

Design/methodology/approach

The research population target is Muslims aged 18 years or older who reside in Greater Jakarta and have purchased certified halal food at least once in the past month. The survey method is a self-administered survey using a purposive sampling technique. The online survey has been successful in getting 283 Muslim respondents. In analyzing the causal relationship and hypothesis testing, this research uses the partial least square – structural equation model.

Findings

This study reveals several results: attitude, halal awareness, religious commitment, trust and perceived risk have a significant influence on the frequency of Muslims buying HCF. Attitude mediates the impact of halal awareness, religious commitment and trust on the frequency of Muslims buying HCF; perceived risk and trust moderate the relationship between religious commitment and the frequency of Muslims buying HCF.

Originality/value

Research on halal food is still limited, including in Indonesia. Meanwhile, the study explores the actual behavior of consumers, particularly in a certified halal food context, which is still rare in the existing literature. At the same time, the intention-behavior gap can lead to wrong decisions. Furthermore, this study also studies how Muslims feel when they consume foods that are not certified as halal. Research like this has an immense opportunity to be developed because not many have been developed.

信任和感知风险对穆斯林购买清真认证食品行为的影响
目的本研究的目的是根据知识-态度-行为模型和态度-行为-情境模型这两个理论,研究鼓励/抑制穆斯林购买清真认证食品(HCF)行为的因素;研究信任和感知风险对穆斯林购买 HCF 行为的影响,以及它们在调节清真意识和宗教承诺与穆斯林购买 HCF 行为之间关系中的作用。设计/方法/途径研究对象为居住在大雅加达地区、年龄在 18 岁以上、在过去一个月中至少购买过一次经认证的清真食品的穆斯林。调查方法为自填式调查,采用目的性抽样技术。在线调查成功获得了 283 名穆斯林受访者。在分析因果关系和假设检验时,本研究采用了偏最小二乘法--结构方程模型。研究结果本研究揭示了几个结果:态度、清真意识、宗教承诺、信任和感知风险对穆斯林购买 HCF 的频率有显著影响。态度调节了清真意识、宗教承诺和信任对穆斯林购买 HCF 频率的影响;感知风险和信任调节了宗教承诺和穆斯林购买 HCF 频率之间的关系。同时,本研究探讨了消费者的实际行为,尤其是在认证清真食品的背景下,这在现有文献中仍然很少见。同时,意向与行为之间的差距可能会导致错误的决策。此外,本研究还研究了穆斯林在食用未经认证的清真食品时的感受。这样的研究有很大的发展机会,因为这样的研究还不多。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
28.10%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: Launched in 2010, Journal of Islamic Marketing (JIMA) was the first journal dedicated to investigating Marketing’s relationship with Islam, in theory and practice, across Muslim majority and minority geographies. JIMA tackles the nuances associated with Muslim consumption patterns, doing business in Muslim markets, and targeting Muslim consumers. When considering the acronyms for the emerging economies to watch: in 2001 it was BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China); and more recently in 2013 MINT (Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, Turkey), and CIVETS (Columbia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa) – then it is apparent that economies with large Muslim populations are growing in importance. One quarter of the world''s population are Muslim, with well over half of Muslims today under the age of 25 - which prompted Miles Young, Global CEO of Ogilvy, to assert that Muslims are the "third one billion", following interest in Indian and Chinese billions, in terms of market opportunities.
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