11/20/2019 / By Grace Olson
Breakfast cereals are convenient and easy to eat, but they are not as healthy as they claim to be.
A closer look at their lists of ingredients reveals that most breakfast cereals are made from processed grains and have a high sugar content. In fact, one study published in the Journal of Public Policy and Marketing found that food packaging claims have little to no correlation to the cereal’s actual nutritional content.
The research was a combination of four studies, each evaluating different aspects of food claims, nutritional content, and how these affect consumers’ buying habits. Researchers from the US found that people are more likely to buy food based on the presence of a positive ingredient, rather than the absence of a negative one.
Moreover, researchers pointed out that consumers are easily influenced by these food claims and suggested the need for public policy changes.
The packaging of food products changes according to the trends of consumers’ tastes. Today, there is a cry for healthier foods. The food packaging complies, but the list of ingredients says otherwise.
Breakfast cereals are particularly infamous for their packaging. Despite their poor nutritional quality, their food packaging contains a range of nutritional food claims. (Related: Obesity alert: Kids consume 10 pounds of sugar a year in their breakfast cereal.)
Despite calls to check the list of ingredients, consumers still mostly rely on the front packaging. The researchers wanted to examine the relationship between front-of-package (FOP) claims and consumer taste. They took a closer look into the factors driving each claim and how these factors affected one another.
The researchers conducted four studies, each with its own focus.
Study 1 – Researchers found that FOP claims always pointed out two things:
Study 2 – After comparing breakfast cereals’ food claims to their nutritional content, findings revealed that there was no correlation between the two.
Study 3 – Researchers found that consumers were more likely to buy a product based on the presence of a positive attribute rather than the absence of a negative one. The former, they suggested, simply made the product seem healthier and tastier.
Study 4 – Consumers had different goals when buying food (hedonic, healthy, and weight loss). The classification of claims could predict each consumer’s choice of food.
Overall, breakfast cereal FOP claims can influence which foods consumers prefer, even if their benefits are not scientifically justified.
There are plenty of healthy, natural foods that can substitute a bowl of store-bought cereal each morning. Their ingredients are easily available, and they are easy to prepare. Try the following below:
Consumers have to be smart about what they buy. Make sure to always check the list of ingredients and keep up to date on healthy alternatives. Find out on which ingredients to watch out for at Ingredients.news.
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Tagged Under: artificial sweeteners, breakfast cereal, fightobesity, food claims, food packaging, food safety, grocery, nutrition, sugar
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