WSU News Center

WSU News Archive

  Friday, May 24, 2013

Organic or not?

In study of cotton apparel, everyone has their price

Friday, Jan. 25, 2013

By Rachel Webber, College of Agricultural, Human and Natural Resource Sciences


Ellis
Joan Ellis
PULLMAN, Wash. – Joan Ellis holds up two white cotton t-shirts printed with state college logos. The tees appear identical, but one is sourced from conventional cotton and the other from organic. Would that difference, Ellis and her Washington State University colleagues wondered, change the price consumers are willing to pay for the shirts?
 
As consumers become increasingly conscious of how their purchases influence labor practices and use natural resources, some make product choices that show concern for people and the planet.
 
That may include a willingness to pay more - about 25 percent more for organic apparel, said Ellis, associate professor of Apparel, Merchandising, Design & Textiles (AMDT), referencing a pilot study funded by the WSU Agricultural Research Center and recently published in the International Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management.
 
"If the consumer is not willing to pay, then everything upstream - the growing, processing, distribution and selling - has no ramifications,” Ellis said. "You have to start with identifying the consumer. If the consumer won’t buy it, everything else is moot.”
 
The research team is particularly interested in understanding the relationship between what people say they’re willing to pay versus what they’ll actually pay at market.

Cotton sustainability focus of seminar series

WSU will host a series of six seminars during the 2013 academic year focused on the sustainability of cotton. Students and the community are invited to learn about cotton fibers and textiles from the agricultural level to the retail end, said Joan Ellis, associate professor for Apparel, Merchandising, Design & Textiles (AMDT).

The series will include a faculty-led visit to Cotton Inc. headquarters in Cary, N.C., this spring. The trip will provide 15 WSU students interested in the future of the textile and apparel industry with the opportunity to meet researchers in the field. They will observe the testing, production and processing of cotton textiles.

Monthly seminars begin in February and continue in March, April, September, October and November. Seminars are funded through a Cotton Inc. grant won by Karen Leonas, AMDT chair and professor. Upcoming dates will be available at http://amdt.wsu.edu/.

Consumers’ intentions often don’t match their purchase behaviors, Ellis said; everyone has their price.
 
The pilot study was one of the first to use a type of experimental auction methodology to evoke the true price a person will pay for a product.
 
McCracken
Vicki McCracken
The team - Ellis and AMDT graduate student Emily Hunt with Vicki McCracken, professor, and Nate Skuza, former doctoral student, from the School of Economic Sciences - used a sample of two large university classes. They found that:
 
* Students who pay for their own clothing had a lower willingness to pay for both organic and conventional tees than students whose parents, for example, buy their clothing. 
* Students who believe organics are of a higher quality were willing to pay more for both organic and conventional cotton tees.
* Students who had a history of purchasing organic products were willing to pay more for the organic than the conventional variety.
 
Ellis said the pilot study opens opportunities for continued research into organic apparel and consumer behavior. For example, the team hopes to look at the influence of social media and social norms, willingness to pay for organic high fashion versus organic low fashion, interest in buying apparel versus textiles like bedding, and willingness to pay based on consumer interest in fashion.
 
"The pilot study’s traction definitely shows an interest in consumer behavior and marketing implications for organic apparel,” she said. "It validated what we knew about interest out in the market and the potential to push forward on this particular topic.”
 
See the article by Joan L. Ellis, Vicki A. McCracken, Nathan Skuza, (2012) "Insights into willingness to pay for organic cotton apparel" in the Journal of Fashion Marketing and Management, Vol. 16 Iss: 3, pp. 290-305, here.
 

--------------------------------
Contacts:
Joan Ellis, WSU Apparel, Merchandising, Design & Textiles, 509-335-8399 joana@wsu.edu
Rachel Webber, WSU College of Agricultural, Human and Natural Resource Sciences,
509-335-0837, rcwebber@wsu.edu

Note: To share this article, please click the orange-colored 'Share' button at the top or bottom of the page
 Print  Email  Facebook  Twitter  Release  Share



WSU News, Washington State University, Pullman WA 99164-1040 | (509) 335-3581 | rfrank@wsu.edu | Submit Article Idea