THE MEDIATING INFLUENCE OF DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS ON THE PURCHASE INTENTION OF ORGANIC FOOD AMONG ACADEMIC STAFF OF NIGERIAN UNIVERSITIES
Keywords:
: demographic factors, organic food benefits, purchase intentions, subjective norms, barriers and challenges, awareness and information sourcesAbstract
This research concerns the mediating influence of demographic factors on the
purchase intention of organic food among academic staff of Nigerian universities. Employing
a quantitative research methodology, this research collected data through structured
questionnaire distributed to a sample of 370 academic staff members across various
universities in south-east, Nigeria, achieving a response rate of 82.16% with 304 valid
responses. The research hypotheses were tested using statistical methods to assess direct and
indirect effects, with a significance threshold set at the 5% level. Our analysis revealed several
key findings. Firstly, there was a strong direct effect of attitudes towards organic food benefits
on purchase intentions, with a coefficient of 0.6764 and a 95% confidence interval ranging
from 0.6020 to 0.7509, indicating a robust positive influence. Furthermore, demographic
factors were found to mediate this relationship significantly, as evidenced by an indirect effect
of 0.0230 with a bootstrap confidence interval not including zero (0.0067 to 0.0461). Similarly,
motivations for purchasing organic food displayed a direct negative impact on purchase
intentions (coefficient -0.3857, 95% confidence interval from -0.4870 to -0.2843) and were also
significantly mediated by demographic factors, showing an indirect effect of -0.0403. The study
also established the significant influence of subjective norms and awareness and information
sources on purchase intentions, with respective coefficients of 0.2726 and -0.3492. In both
cases, demographic factors served as a significant mediator, enhancing our understanding of
how individual characteristics intersect with cultural and social influences to affect
behavioural outcomes in organic food markets. Barriers and challenges related to sourcing
organic food emerged as another critical factor positively influencing purchase intentions,
demonstrated by a direct effect coefficient of 0.3485 and confirmed mediation by demographic
factors (indirect effect 0.0485). This finding suggests that overcoming such barriers may
significantly boost organic food consumption among this demographic. These findings
underscore the necessity for targeted educational campaigns and institutional support to
navigate the identified barriers effectively and foster a more sustainable consumption pattern
among academics