Abstract:
Nowadays due to the changes in life styles, education, income, and consumption patterns, most of
the people prefer to consume their food products from modern restaurants. Modern restaurants are
characterized by food which is supplied quickly after ordering with minimal services and eating
out gives consumers to satisfy their hunger, and need for convenience, pleasure, entertainment,
time saving, social interaction and the mood transformation. The objective of this study is to
examine the relationship between consumers’ food away from home consumption frequency and
their socio-economic/ demographic characteristics and attitudes at modern restaurants in
Vavuniya. The food product consumption from modern restaurants has been gradually grown after
2000 and there are now more than seven restaurants in Vavuniya. Seven restaurants were surveyed
in 2009 and it has been done among the households in both city and rural areas. Primary data were
collected from a total of 245 respondents through a structured questionnaire and judgment
sampling techniques were used. For the above purpose, the estimation techniques such as
descriptive statistics, ordered probit model and marginal effects were analysed. The descriptive
analysis of the data revealed the food consumption patterns of the respondents and this results
showed that, 2.8% of the respondents never consumed food, 60.7% of them consumed food on
occasional basis, 17.9% consumed food once or twice a month and 18.6% of them consumed food
once a week in the restaurants in Vavuniya. Further, an empirical model was estimated using an
ordered probit approach to obtain the coefficients applied to the calculation of marginal effects and
probabilities. The sign and significance of coefficients and marginal effects were used to ascertain
consumer characteristics which are important to the frequency of food consumption at modern
restaurants. The results from the ordered probit model indicate that age, status of employment, size
of the households, education, income and other factors of the respondents, attitudes toward the
price of the food products, convenience and health concerns significantly influence the frequency
of food consumption. In particular, smaller households are more likely to consume food products
than larger households. Overall, the results of the ordered probit model suggests that being in large
household is the characteristic which has the highest negative effect on the frequency of food
consumption while being in the household with one child with one child with higher education and income levels are the characteristics that contribute to the highest positive effect on the
probability of consumption. The findings will help modern food managers to understand the
critical factors that influence consumers’ food consumption behaviour and help them to make
improvements accordingly