Abstract

Plate leftovers are an extensive source of food waste in restaurants. One solution to reduce this waste would be that consumers take plate leftovers home (i.e., use doggy bags). Yet, existing social norms in many countries and feelings of shame currently inhibit consumers from using doggy bags. The present research examines whether switching to an opt-out system, whereby consumers are offered a doggy bag by default, can decrease these feelings of shame and positively affect doggy-bag uptake. Yet, next to these positive effects, negative firm-related consequences may occur. Consumers may perceive a limitation in their freedom of choice, which can negatively affect their evaluations of the restaurant and its service staff. A series of five experiments (total n = 1166) shows that an opt-out strategy increases doggy-bag uptake more (on average 74% uptake compared to 27% for an opt-in strategy) than offering an explicit choice to consumers (average 49% uptake), but that an opt-out strategy indeed has negative effects on restaurant and service staff evaluations. Our research also shows that by (1) giving consumers a subordinate choice (e.g., a choice between different types of doggy bags) and by (2) providing friendly service when presenting the doggy bags, restaurants can ensure an effective doggy-bag uptake without detrimental effects on restaurant or service staff evaluations, or on household food waste. These findings provide new and valuable insights for research on food waste and on influence strategies towards sustainable behaviors.

Highlights

  • Food waste is “a key barrier to sustainability” due to its negative effects on food security, resources, and on the environment (Xue et al, 2017)

  • We find no evidence that influence strategies transfer food waste from restaurants to households, and for all strategies the consumption from doggy bags is high

  • We show that promoting the uptake of doggy bags can have posi­ tive environmental consequences, but can affect evaluations of the restaurant and its staff

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Summary

Introduction

Food waste is “a key barrier to sustainability” due to its negative effects on food security, resources, and on the environment (Xue et al, 2017). Consumers experience feelings of shame when asking for doggy bags, and tend to avoid the use of doggy bags, when the normative behavior is to leave the leftover food on the plate (Hamerman et al, 2017; Sirieix et al, 2017). Despite their clear rele­ vance, doggy bags continue “to be underexplored as a viable food waste recovery strategy” Given the importance of diminishing food waste, and the challenge in changing consumer behavior, there is a need for research examining the effectiveness of influence strategies that can promote the uptake of doggy bags in the face of counterproductive social norms

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