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Articles

Food Culture Distance as a Predictor of Foreign Market Selection: The Case of Swedish Food Exporters

Pages 75-97 | Published online: 23 Dec 2013
 

Abstract

The purpose of this article is to examine the impact of dissimilarity in food culture, “food culture distance,” as a predictor of foreign market selection by food exporters. The sample for this study consisted of 96 export ventures by Swedish food companies in 27 international markets. A composite index of the construct food culture distance was calculated and used as a predictor of foreign market attractiveness for food exporters. The findings indicate that food culture distance does positively impact the attractiveness of a foreign market for food exporters, implying that the greater the perceived distance in terms of food culture, the more attractive is the market for food exporters to enter.

Notes

1Examples of entry modes are exporting, selling via agent, sales subsidiary, and production subsidiary (CitationJohanson & Vahlne, 1977).

2According to CitationBarney (1991), a firm's strategically relevant resources are those attributes of a firm's resources that enable a firm to implement strategies that improve its performance. Assets, capabilities, organizational processes, information, and technology are examples of these resources (CitationBarney, 1991).

3According to SME's definition recommended by CitationEuropean Commission (2003), an enterprise qualifies as an SME if the number of its staff is less than 250.

4A natural logarithm transformation was used to correct the highly skewed and kurtotic distribution of trade flow among the countries. This method was used in previous research (e.g., CitationDow, 2000; CitationDow & Karunaratha, 2006; CitationMalhotra et al., 2009).

5Trade flow in this study corresponds to Sweden's total export value (in Swedish krona) of food products (including beverages) between 2007 and 2009 to nominated markets. Data were obtained from CitationStatistics Sweden (2011).

6Data for GDP (constant 2000 US$) were obtained from CitationWorld Bank (2011).

7Geographical distance was calculated in terms of actual distance in kilometers between the capitals of the acquiring country (Sweden) and the target country j. The distance in kilometers was obtained from CitationGeobytes Databases (2010). This approach is consistent with previous research (CitationBrock et al., 2011; CitationMalhotra et al., 2009).

8Results from the multicollinearity test indicated that the tolerance value for the dimension fundamental food style (i 1) was less than 0.10, which is an indication for multicollinearity (Hair Jr. et al., 2010). Accordingly, i 1 was highly correlated with the dimension drinking preferences (i 5). To address this issue and bring multicollinearity within acceptable levels, model 2 was regressed without i 1 (Hair Jr. et al., 2010). The results were quite similar to the original model, i.e., i 2 and i 3 positively influenced foreign market attractiveness while i 4 influenced negatively the attractiveness of a foreign market for food exporters. Moreover, R 2 equaled approximately 73%.

9It should be noted that R 2 value increases when the number of (independent) variables in the model increases (Hair Jr. et al., 2010). Therefore, after removing the nonsignificant dimensions (i 5 and i 6) in model 2, the model was tested again against the dependent variable, which resulted in quite similar R 2 (≈75%).

10It is noteworthy that both CitationEvans and Mavondo (2002) and CitationEvans et al. (2008) studied non-food companies. Therefore, the current study supports their findings even in the context of the food sector.

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