National image as a competitive disadvantage: the case of the New Zealand organic food industry
- Geoffrey Jones,
- Harvard University,
- ,
- Auckland University of Technology
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review
Abstract
Abstract: This article examines why organic agriculture and food consumption developed more strongly in some countries than others between the 1970s and the 2000s. The focus is the limited growth of the New Zealand organic sector, which contrasts with countries such as Denmark which were similar in size and shared significant export agri-business sectors, but whose organic food sector became significantly larger. While the power of incumbent vested interests and unsupportive public policies emerge as major explanatory factors, the article argues that the long-established national image of New Zealand as a clean and green country may have been the major constraint.
Publication Information
Output type
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review
Original language
EnglishPages from-to (Number of pages)
Pages 1262-1288 (27 pages)Journal (Volume, Issue Number)
Business History (Volume 58, Issue 8)Publication milestones
- Published - 23/05/2016
Publication status
Published - 23/05/2016
ISSN
0007-6791External Publication IDs
- Scopus: 84978877758
