Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-01T02:38:00.277Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Food shopping transition: socio-economic characteristics and motivations associated with use of supermarkets in a North African urban environment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 March 2010

Sophie Tessier*
Affiliation:
Mixed Research Unit 204 NUTRIPASS (IRD/Montpellier I/Montpellier II), Montpellier, France
Pierre Traissac
Affiliation:
Mixed Research Unit 204 NUTRIPASS (IRD/Montpellier I/Montpellier II), Montpellier, France
Nicolas Bricas
Affiliation:
Cirad, Mixed Research Unit Moisa, Montpellier, France
Bernard Maire
Affiliation:
Mixed Research Unit 204 NUTRIPASS (IRD/Montpellier I/Montpellier II), Montpellier, France
Sabrina Eymard-Duvernay
Affiliation:
Mixed Research Unit 204 NUTRIPASS (IRD/Montpellier I/Montpellier II), Montpellier, France
Jalila El Ati
Affiliation:
National Institute of Nutrition (INNTA), Tunis, Tunisia
Francis Delpeuch
Affiliation:
Mixed Research Unit 204 NUTRIPASS (IRD/Montpellier I/Montpellier II), Montpellier, France
*
*Corresponding author: Email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective

In the context of the nutrition transition and associated changes in the food retail sector, to examine the socio-economic characteristics and motivations of shoppers using different retail formats (large supermarkets (LSM), medium-sized supermarkets (MSM) or traditional outlets) in Tunisia.

Design

Cross-sectional survey (2006). Socio-economic status, type of food retailer and motivations data were collected during house visits. Associations between socio-economic factors and type of retailer were assessed by multinomial regression; correspondence analysis was used to analyse declared motivations.

Setting

Peri-urban area around Tunis, Tunisia, North Africa.

Subjects

Clustered random sample of 724 households.

Results

One-third of the households used LSM, two-thirds used either type of supermarket, but less than 5 % used supermarkets only. Those who shopped for food at supermarkets were of higher socio-economic status; those who used LSM were much wealthier, more often had a steady income or owned a credit card, while MSM users were more urban and had a higher level of education. Most households still frequently used traditional outlets, mostly their neighbourhood grocer. Reasons given for shopping at the different retailers were most markedly leisure for LSM, while for the neighbourhood grocer the reasons were fidelity, proximity and availability of credit (the latter even more for lower-income customers).

Conclusions

The results pertain to the transition in food shopping practices in a south Mediterranean country; they should be considered in the context of growing inequalities in health linked to the nutritional transition, as they differentiate use and motivations for the choice of supermarkets v. traditional food retailers according to socio-economic status.

Type
Research paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2010

As a corollary of rapid economic development, middle-income countries are experiencing a rapid nutritional transition, featuring marked changes in diet and lifestyles(Reference Popkin and Gordon-Larsen1). In this context, major transformations in the food retail sector have been observed, including a sharp rise in the number of supermarkets(Reference Reardon, Timmer and Barrett2). In urban areas of developing countries, large-scale food retailers are tending to replace traditional markets, neighbourhood stores and street sellers; this process is referred to by some authors as ‘supermarketisation’(Reference Traill3). Until recently attention was focused more on the potential consequences of such supermarketisation for the agricultural sector(Reference Codron, Boushina and Fort4, Reference Weatherspoon and Reardon5), and the results of the few studies linking the development of supermarkets to possible changes in food shopping habits and dietary intake have been mixed. However, a recent comprehensive review of the dietary implications of supermarket development worldwide(Reference Hawkes6) clearly showed that the continued development of supermarkets will have major implications.

Beyond the influence on food consumption for regular users, the implications of the development of supermarkets for dietary intake at the population level also depend on the prevalence of exposure to these retail outlets. Regarding this issue in developing countries, some authors(Reference Reardon and Berdegue7, Reference Goldman, Ramaswami and Krider8) have proposed a three-step model of diffusion in which supermarkets first appeal to upper-income consumers, then to the middle class and finally to the urban poor, because prices tend to drop as supermarkets continue to spread. However, in urban areas of developing countries, supermarkets currently appear to coexist alongside small-scale commercial outlets(Reference Stamoulis, Pingali and Shetty9), central food markets, neighbourhood stores and sellers of street food. Among the characteristics of supermarkets that have implications for consumers’ diets are their location and format(Reference Hawkes6, Reference Morland and Evenson10). However, to our knowledge, no study has yet analysed the socio-economic characteristics of the shoppers who use these different retail formats.

Tunisia (a North African country) is experiencing major economic, epidemiological and nutritional changes(Reference Aounallah-Skhiri, Romdhane and Traissac11, Reference Beltaifa, Traissac and El Ati12), with a rise in the number of modern supermarkets including the recent opening of two ‘hypermarkets’ in the vicinity of the capital city, Tunis. Building on a previous paper on the associations between supermarket use and dietary intake(Reference Tessier, Traissac and Maire13), the objective of the present analyses was to examine the socio-economic characteristics of shoppers using different retail formats in Tunisia, and their motivations for doing so. The retail formats were large supermarkets, medium-sized supermarkets and traditional outlets.

Methods

Study area

Tunisia, a south Mediterranean country, is located between Algeria and Libya, has a population of 10 million and a middle level of development (ranked 91/177 on the Human Development Index composite scale in 2005(14)). Our study area was Greater Tunis, with about 2 million inhabitants(15). It is the most developed and urbanised area in Tunisia and has the most supermarkets. Medium-sized supermarkets have existed in Tunisia for decades, but since the beginning of the 2000s, a major change in the food retail landscape has taken place with the opening of two ‘hypermarkets’ in the Greater Tunis area. This has also had indirect results in that established supermarket chains have started opening new outlets as well as modernising their internal layout and sales practices(16).

Subjects

A cross-sectional survey was conducted in November–December 2006 in Greater Tunis. Based on data from the 2004 census, the survey used a random, two-level (census area, household) clustered sample of households(Reference Levy and Lemeshow17). In each household, the person in charge of main food shopping was interviewed.

Data

Part of the survey questionnaire was derived from a preliminary qualitative phase (face-to-face interviews and focus group discussions) to identify the relevant contextual information.

Socio-economic characteristics

Socio-economic and demographic data were collected at both individual and household levels (Table 1). An asset-based household economic level proxy was computed by multiple correspondence analysis(Reference Greenacre18) from dwelling characteristics, utilities and appliances. The first principal component was used as a proxy of relative household wealth(Reference Beltaifa, Traissac and El Ati12, Reference Delpeuch, Cornu and Massamba19) and was used in analyses after breakdown into tertiles of increasing level (low, medium and high).

Table 1 Socio-economic and demographic characteristics of the sample, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006

*Number of households surveyed.

†Weighted proportions.

Type of outlet used for main food shopping

Although some analyses pertained to supermarkets, distinction was made between ‘medium-sized supermarkets’ (MSM) and ‘hypermarkets’, i.e. ‘large supermarkets’ (LSM), according to their surface area (≥10 000 m2 for LSM). One reason for the choice of this definition, among others(16), was because, beyond their surface area, hypermarkets in Greater Tunis differ from medium-sized supermarkets in that they are located in a shopping mall comprising a wide range of shops, cafés/cafeterias and a car park, offer a wider range of fresh food departments (catering, bread and pastries, butcher, fishmonger) and also have larger non-food departments. Finally, although supermarkets of medium size are quite evenly distributed throughout Greater Tunis, both hypermarkets are located in the outskirts of the area.

In this survey, ‘grocers’ (attar) are independent family-run food outlets with a sales area of less than 50 m2 (reference (16)). The term ‘market’ refers to traditional open-air or covered markets in town centres or neighbourhoods with rows of retailers(Reference Hawkes6).

The survey questionnaire included items for which interviewees were asked to rank in order of priority (1st, 2nd or 3rd) the three types of outlets where they most frequently did their main food shopping, and also, for supermarkets, included items regarding time and distance to the outlets. For each type of retail outlet (LSM, MSM, grocer, market), binary variables coded whether interviewees used that type of outlet for their main food shopping (regardless of the rank). From the variables pertaining to MSM and/or LSM, a three-category hierarchical variable was computed: never shopped at supermarkets/shopped at MSM only (regardless of other types of outlets but excluding LSM)/shopped at LSM (regardless of MSM or other type of outlets). For both MSM and LSM, easy access (v. not) was defined as living less than 5 km or less than 30 min from a retail outlet.

Reasons for using the different types of food outlet

The questionnaire featured open questions, where subjects could state whatever reasons or motivations they associated with the use of each type of outlet. From the exhaustive list of answers, the twelve most frequently declared items were identified (Table 3) and used in the analyses.

Data collection

The questionnaire was translated into Arabic, pre-tested and validated with the target population. Subjects were interviewed at home by specially trained local nutritionists.

Ethics

The Tunisian National Statistical Council reviewed and approved the study (visa no. 11/2006). The surveyed subjects were informed of their right to refuse to take part and of the strict respect of the confidentiality of their answers, and gave their verbal consent to take part in the study.

Data management and analysis

Data entry, including quality checks and validation by double entry of questionnaires, was performed with EpiData version 3·1 (EpiData Association, Odense, Denmark). Data management was performed with the Stata statistical software package version 9·2 (StataCorp LP, College Station, TX, USA).

We assessed the associations between the multinomial response variable coding shopping at supermarkets (LSM, MSM or never) and socio-economic variables using multivariate multinomial logit regression models(Reference Hosmer and Lemeshow20). The strength of (crude or adjusted) associations was assessed by relative risk ratios, using ‘never’ as the reference response variable category. Correspondence analysis was used for analysis of associations between the type of retail outlet and reasons stated for their use(Reference Greenacre18).

All analyses took into account characteristics of the sampling design(Reference Korn and Graubard21) (clustering, sampling weights also including a post-stratification on sex, age and urban v. rural) using the appropriate svy commands of the Stata software. The complete-case analysis method was used to deal with missing data. Results are given as the estimate with its design-based standard error or confidence interval. The first type error rate was set at 0·05 for all analyses.

Results

Socio-economic characteristics

From a total of 753 households that were to be included in the study, 724 households were actually surveyed. Most (Table 1) were from an urban area and mean household size was 4·7 (se 0·1; n 723). One-third of the households (data not shown) declared they owned a car. Two-thirds of the households declared they had a steady income, but only a minority declared they owned a credit card. Those in charge of food shopping were predominantly female; the mean age was 46·2 (se 0·6) years, most were married; 24·0 % had no schooling at all, while 43·1 % had reached secondary level or higher; the majority (67·4 %) said they did not work outside the home.

Type of outlet used for main food shopping

Out of the total of 724 households, 58·8 (se 4·3) % used supermarkets for their main food shopping (LSM and/or MSM), but only 27·3 (se 3·6) % declared using LSM (regardless of MSM, grocer or market) and 32·2 (se 2·9) % used only MSM (i.e. regardless of grocer and market but excluding LSM). Finally, only 4·5 (se 1·3) % of households used only supermarkets for their main food shopping. Concerning time and distance (n 711), 74·1 (se 4·2) % had ‘easy access’ to MSM v. 23·9 (se 4·5) % only to LSM. Most households, 93·8 (se 1·6) %, used their nearby grocer and 26·5 (se 2·8) % used the market.

Socio-economic factors associated with shopping at supermarkets

Results of multinomial regression models are presented in Table 2 (n 703, complete-case analysis subsample). Crude associations showed that urban households were much more likely to shop at both MSM and LSM v. never, but in adjusted analyses the association persisted only for MSM. That small households shopped more at MSM v. never in unadjusted analysis did not stand the adjustment but persisted somewhat for shopping at LSM (linear trend P = 0·001). For MSM, the sizeable unadjusted association with the economic level of the household was drastically reduced by the adjustment; conversely, the spectacularly strong unadjusted association between likelihood of shopping at LSM and increasing economic level, though reduced, was still remarkable once the confounding of other socio-economic variables was taken into account. Households with a steady income, a credit card or easy access were twice as likely to shop at MSM v. never, but when adjusted only steady income was still associated; for shopping at LSM v. never, unadjusted associations were stronger for steady income, owning a credit card and easy access, but although still significant, were much reduced after adjustment, indicating that their effect was greatly (though not entirely) confounded by other socio-economic variables.

Table 2 Associations of socio-economic characteristics with use of large (LSM) or medium-sized supermarkets (MSM) for main food shopping, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006 (n 703)

RRR, relative risk ratio.

*Complete-case analysis: subjects with no missing values for neither of the socio-economic cofactors (n 703).

†Adjusted for all variables in column 1.

‡Response variable reference category: never uses neither MSM nor LSM for main food shopping.

§Uses MSM for main food shopping, regardless of grocer and traditional market but excluding LSM.

∥Uses LSM, regardless of grocer, traditional market and MSM.

Concerning the characteristics of the person in charge of food shopping, age was not associated with use of MSM or LSM either before or after adjustment, even if the effect of the adjustment was towards more use of supermarkets by younger people. Neither the sex nor the marital status of the person in charge of food shopping was associated with the use of supermarkets. In unadjusted analyses, a high education level was clearly associated with shopping at MSM and even more for LSM; however, once adjusted, a strong independent association with education level only persisted for MSM, while it was much reduced for LSM (twice lower than for MSM). The observed unadjusted association with the professional occupation of the person was mostly confounded by other socio-economic variables.

Regarding access issues, additional analyses were also performed to specifically try to assess associations of supermarket use with car ownership (detailed data not shown). Unadjusted analysis revealed that it was indeed more associated with LSM than MSM use but its effect was entirely confounded by socio-economic variables.

Reasons for choice of type of retail outlet

Table 3 lists weighted percentages pertaining to the reasons (rows) given by users for their choice of a specific type of retail outlet (columns). Out of the twelve items, only two pertained to the food products themselves. An equal number of five items was related to characteristics of the store or the shopping itself; among these items, proximity was most often quoted by retail category but also over the whole sample of subjects. Figure 1 displays the combined rows/columns on the two first axes of the correspondence analysis of the choice data. The first and second axis account for respectively 77·1 % and 18·5 % of total inertia, so that the residual information not taken into account is minor; the high percentage of inertia on the first axis and the typical ‘horseshoe’ shape of the mapping indicate a mostly one-dimensional structure. Contributions to inertia (data not shown) on the first axis of row and column points revealed that the salient feature was that the subjects contrasted ‘large supermarkets’ (chosen for the ‘leisure’ dimension of shopping there but not their ‘proximity’) v. the ‘nearby grocer’ (chosen mainly because of ‘availability of credit’, and ‘proximity’ but also ‘emergency shopping’ and ‘fidelity’, but not ‘good prices’ and not ‘quality choice’). Contrasts observed on axis two (details not shown) resulted in a much lower level of information indicating that markets were quoted as being differentially chosen v. all other types of retail because of ‘freedom of choice’, v. ‘large supermarkets’ because of their ‘proximity’, and v. ‘grocer’ because of their ‘good prices’. It should be noted that reasons for the choice of ‘medium supermarkets’ were not very distinct, their profile being intermediary between ‘large supermarkets’ and other retail outlets.

Table 3 Reasons stated for choice of type of food retail outlet, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006 (n 724)

LSM, large supermarket; MSM, medium-sized supermarket.

*Number of persons (among the 724 surveyed) using type of outlet for main food shopping.

†Weighted proportions.

Fig. 1 Bi-plot of the first two axes of the correspondence analysis of reasons stated for the choice of type of food outlet, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006. Labels are centred on (x, y) coordinates; SM, supermarket

Variations around these overall trends were observed according to socio-economic characteristics (detailed data not shown). There was a strong decreasing relationship between household economic level and likelihood of quoting credit as a reason for shopping at the nearby grocer (40·0 (se 3·5) %, 18·8 (se 2·6) % and 8·8 (se 2·5) % for the lower, middle and higher tertile of economic level, respectively, n 685, P < 0·0001). Conversely, the probability of declaring using the nearby grocer for emergency food shopping increased with economic level (4·2 (se 1·9) %, 13·3 (se 2·5) % and 25·2 (se 5·2) % for the first, second and third tertile, respectively, n 685, P = 0·0001).

Discussion

In the context of a rapidly evolving nutritional transition and major changes in lifestyle, the present study assessed the relative importance of different types of food retailer (modern and traditional), the socio-economic profiles of consumers and the reasons behind the choice of the different types of outlets in Greater Tunis.

Concerning the overall use of supermarkets, while MSM were used by half the households, only just over a quarter of these consumers also used LSM. As expected, sharp contrasts between areas and socio-economic categories were observed as well as differences according to the type of outlet. A strong association was found with urban area only for supermarkets of medium size but not for large ones, but results pertaining to urban v. rural households should not be overemphasised given the mostly urban nature of the study population: the impact of supermarkets on peripheral rural areas warrants further research. Nevertheless, this result is not entirely surprising given the intra-urban location of MSM in the district of Tunis v. more peripheral LSM. It also underlines the existence, all other things being equal, of location issues specific to the type of supermarket (rather independently of other socio-economic factors, proximity was much more often quoted as a reason for the choice of MSM than for LSM).

Regarding the inverse association between small household size and LSM use, it is likely related to a combination of more ‘modern’ socio-cultural values (in relation with the demographic transition but also cultural values, e.g. whether or not several generations still live under the same roof) as well as the higher socio-economic status of smaller households in the context. Although adjustment did reduce the strength of the association by half, it was still quite sizeable, especially for the smaller households; adjustment for socio-economic factors likely only partly accounts for the socio-cultural factors that underlie the relationship between the use of LSM and the size of the household. Concerning household socio-economic level, once adjusted, LSM use was shown to increase drastically with overall household wealth while the association was much weaker for MSM. Having a steady income was found to be independently associated with the use of both types of supermarkets. Having a credit card and easy access to supermarkets were quite specifically associated with LSM but nevertheless strongly confounded by other socio-economic factors (mostly household wealth). For these three factors, the association was nevertheless weak compared with household overall wealth. Among all the characteristics of the person in charge of food shopping, only a specific effect of a higher level of education was clearly associated with shopping at supermarkets, and the association was much stronger for medium-sized than large supermarkets. Concerning age, once adjusted for socio-economic confounders, associations with age were in line with the hypothesis that shopping at supermarkets and especially LSM would be more frequent among younger customers; but conditional on size of the sample, this could not be inferred to the study population.

Thus, overall, we found that the use of supermarkets is more frequent among socio-economically privileged and more educated consumers in Greater Tunis. This suggests that, in the Tunis area, although supermarkets have been there for a long time, supermarket development is still only at the first step of the model of diffusion. This contrasts with Kenya, a low-income country where 60 % of the 30 % poorest consumers shop at supermarkets(Reference Neven, Reardon and Chege22). Given the three-step diffusion model, this implies that there are context-specific diffusion issues, either cultural or linked to different levels of economic development, or to the relative characteristics of the other types of food retail outlets. It could also be that, in Greater Tunis, MSM and LSM are not at the same stage of diffusion. If we consider that MSM and LSM have in common self-service and differ mainly in their surface area, we could have expected fewer differences between consumer profiles in the two types of retailers. Yet, as indicated by the striking difference between MSM and LSM consumer profiles according to household economic level, we can hypothesise that LSM are at an earlier stage of the supermarkets’ diffusion model than MSM, the latter being, at the same moment in time and in the same town, at a more advanced stage. It could also be that, rather independently of the three-step model, MSM and LSM have and will always have their specific consumers, with specific motivations (e.g. leisure for LSM).

Another salient point of our results is that although for a tiny minority of consumers (4·2 %) the main shopping place is supermarkets to the exclusion of all other types of retail outlet, most households still shop at their neighbourhood grocer, whether or not they shop at supermarkets. This suggests that food shopping practices in Greater Tunis are in a transition stage with a combination of both modern and traditional retail food outlets. Indeed at the national level, even if modern supermarkets are increasing in concentration and popularity, the bulk of Tunisian food retailing is still dominated by small neighbourhood grocery shops(23) of which there are around 250 000 in the whole country. These shops are evenly distributed, including in strictly residential neighbourhoods that otherwise feature no commercial activity, so that most inhabitants of our study area are within short walking distance from an attar.

The fact that food shopping still relies heavily on more traditional types of outlet is all the more true for shoppers whose socio-economic status is low, of whom only 4·9 % were found to use hypermarkets and only about a quarter to use MSM in addition to shopping at their local grocer or market. Overall, the reason that most contrasted the choice of grocers v. other types of retail was ‘availability of credit’. In other contexts (Brazil and China), it has been shown that supermarkets are starting to offer consumers credit cards and even banking services(Reference Reardon and Berdegue24) but in our study area, availability of credit was very clearly quoted mostly only for the neighbourhood grocer. Regarding income-specific differences pertaining to the importance of the availability of credit, households of the lower tertile of economic level were five times more likely to quote this reason for their choice of grocer than those of the higher tertile. This may seem paradoxical, since purchasing food in small quantities from local retailers on a daily basis generally costs more(Reference Porter, Lyon and Potts25), and this feature also stood out in the present study as the neighbourhood grocer was the type of retailer by far the least likely to be associated with good prices or promotions. Nevertheless, for the poorest consumers, the local grocery shop is the main and probably only place where they buy food due to lack of a sufficient steady income (which has been shown to be more associated with supermarket use) despite the fact that, regarding the food products, this type of outlet is much less frequently associated with good quality choice than the other three types of retailers. Interestingly, households from the higher income tertile were six times as likely as the lower textile to quote ‘emergency shopping’ as a reason for using the attar, indicating that although this type of retail outlet is widely used by all categories of households, the reasons for doing so are very different.

In addition to financial matters, it was also shown that traditional food retail fulfils social functions, as consumers are still attached to their personal relationship with their local shopkeeper; indeed, this system better meets consumer’s social and cultural expectations by allowing them to increase their contact with the outside world in a way that the modern distribution system cannot(Reference Goldman, Ramaswami and Krider8, Reference Desjeux26). Although the latter dimension was not directly assessed in our study, the fact that fidelity was much more often quoted as a reason for shopping at the attar v. other types of food retail is likely related to these social and psychological co-factors.

The development of supermarkets is indeed an issue that concerns the diet of high- or middle-income consumers in our study area. Nevertheless, the almost exclusive use of street corner stores for food shopping by lower-income consumers is also an issue. In other settings, some authors have described the emergence of urban ‘food deserts,’ deprived areas where low-income people have poor access to whole foods e.g. to fruit and vegetables, with probable negative consequences for health(Reference Beaulac, Kristjansson and Cummins27, Reference Cummins and Macintyre28). The main underlying factors are wealthier people moving from the centre towards the suburbs and with them the supermarkets that used to be located in the city centres. The situation is currently somewhat different in our study area as both traditional markets and many of the medium-sized supermarkets are still located in the downtown area. But this may change over time and indeed, despite the rise of supermarkets, the importance of corner stores should not be overlooked, e.g. for nutrition interventions targeted through the food retail sector(Reference Cummins, Petticrew and Sparks29Reference Song, Gittelsohn and Kim31).

Regarding the characteristics of the study, its strengths are that the questionnaire was based on a preliminary in-depth qualitative study, that it featured detailed analyses according to the different types of supermarkets and food retail outlets and conducted a detailed assessment and analysis of the motivations behind the choice of the different types of outlets. As for its limitations, one is the cross-sectional design of the survey, which always makes it difficult to interpret observed associations as causal even when care is taken to adjust for relevant confounders(Reference Rothman and Greenland32). The quantitative analysis of declared motivations would have needed to be completed by exploring complex items in more detail (such as ‘quality–choice’ which could be interpreted differently depending on the type of product it actually refers to). Generalisability issues are always of importance. However, although a small country, Tunisia is emblematic both of fast emerging developing countries from an economic/development point of view, and also of a wide range of south and east Mediterranean countries that share societal and cultural issues. Nevertheless, the results of the present study regarding socio-economic characteristics associated with use of the different type of food retails outlets, though partly similar to those observed in Madagascar(Reference Minten33), do differ from those in observed in Kenya(Reference Neven, Reardon and Chege22), Brazil(Reference Reardon and Berdegue24) and Guatemala(Reference Asfaw34). These results show that supermarketisation in the developing world does not operate homogeneously and does not have the same effects in every country. Moreover, our results based on a cross-sectional analysis in 2006 are time-specific and whether or not the current trend in supermarketisation in developing countries will persist is an open question(Reference Minten33).

In emerging countries, in the context of major economic and societal changes, changes in the food retail sector, including the rapid development of supermarkets, have been shown to have consequences for dietary intakes. Nevertheless, studies providing evidence regarding consumers’ motivations as well as socio-economic profiles with respect to the type of food outlet for food shopping are rare in south Mediterranean countries. The present study is thus pioneering with respect to changes in food shopping attitudes and practices linked to the modernisation of food retailing in this context. Indeed, we derived substantiated results regarding the actual influence on food shopping habits: (i) the overall limited use of supermarkets by the study population; (ii) the still predominant role of neighbourhood grocers whether or not combined with supermarket use depending on socio-economic status; (iii) the differential socio-economic profiles of customers of the different types of supermarkets; and (iv) the reasons that motivate use of the different types of outlet. South and east Mediterranean countries are experiencing a fast evolving nutrition transition where obesity and nutrition-related non-communicable diseases are becoming prevalent also among the lower socio-economic strata(Reference Beltaifa, Traissac and El Ati12). In this context, it could seem feasible and cost-effective for those in charge of nutrition policies to address this issue by implementing nutrition interventions (e.g. financial incentives, nutrition education, promotion of ‘healthy’ products, informative labelling) only through centralised types of retail such as supermarkets. But the results of the present study underline that such interventions would likely both not cover a significant part of the population and mainly reach only customers of higher socio-economic status, with thus the risk of increasing inequalities regarding food consumption and nutrition-related non-communicable diseases instead of reducing them.

Acknowledgements

This work was funded by the French Nutrition Society (SFN) in the form of a research prize awarded to S.T., IRD, and benefited from the TAHINA project (Transition and Health Impact in North Africa INCO-MED no. ICA3-2001-10015): sampling frame, field logistics. All co-authors have no conflict of interest to declare. S.T. was involved in all steps of the research, from the study design, data collection, management and analysis to being responsible for writing the manuscript. P.T. was involved in data management and analyses, interpretation of results and the writing of the manuscript. N.B., B.M. and F.D. were involved in the study design, contributed to data analysis and interpretation of results, and helped write the manuscript. S.E.-D. contributed to data management and helped edit the manuscript. J.E.L. contributed to data collection and entry and helped edit the manuscript. The authors wish to thank all members of the INNTA nutrition team for their valuable contribution to fieldwork and data entry.

References

1.Popkin, B & Gordon-Larsen, P (2004) The nutrition transition: worldwide obesity dynamics and their determinants. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 28, Suppl. 3, S2S9.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2.Reardon, T, Timmer, CP, Barrett, CB et al. (2003) The rise of supermarkets in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Am J Agric Econ 85, 11401146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3.Traill, WB (2006) The rapid rise of supermarkets? Dev Policy Rev 24, 163174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4.Codron, JM, Boushina, Z, Fort, F et al. (2004) Supermarkets in low-income Mediterranean countries: impacts on horticulture systems. Dev Policy Rev 22, 587602.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5.Weatherspoon, DD & Reardon, T (2003) The rise of supermarkets in Africa: implications for agrifood systems and the rural poor. Dev Policy Rev 21, 333356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6.Hawkes, C (2008) Dietary implications of supermarket development: a global perspective. Dev Policy Rev 26, 657692.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7.Reardon, T & Berdegue, JA (2002) The rapid rise of supermarkets in Latin America: challenges and opportunities for development. Dev Policy Rev 20, 371388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
8.Goldman, A, Ramaswami, S & Krider, RE (2002) Barriers to the advancement of modern food retail formats: theory and measurements. J Food Retail 78, 281295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
9.Stamoulis, K, Pingali, P & Shetty, P (2004) Emerging challenges for food and nutrition policy in developing countries. J Agric Dev Econ 1, 154167.Google Scholar
10.Morland, KB & Evenson, KR (2009) Obesity prevalence and the local food environment. Health Place 15, 491495.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
11.Aounallah-Skhiri, H, Romdhane, HB, Traissac, P et al. (2008) Nutritional status of Tunisian adolescents: associated gender, environmental and socio-economic factors. Public Health Nutr 11, 13061317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
12.Beltaifa, L, Traissac, P, El Ati, J et al. (2009) Prevalence of obesity and associated socioeconomic factors among Tunisian women from different living environments. Obes Rev 10, 145153.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13.Tessier, S, Traissac, P, Maire, B et al. (2008) Regular users of supermarkets in Greater Tunis have a slightly improved diet quality. J Nutr 138, 768774.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
14.United Nations Development Programme, (editor) (2007) Human Development Report 2007/2008. New York: UNDP.Google Scholar
15.Institut National de la Statistique (2004) Annuaire statistique de la Tunisie No. 47. Tunis: Ministère du développement et de la Coopération Internationale.Google Scholar
16.US Department of Agriculture, Foreign Agricultural Service (2005) Tunisia. Retail Food Sector. GAIN Report no. TS5011. Washington, DC: USDA.Google Scholar
17.Levy, PS & Lemeshow, S (1999) Sampling of Populations. Methods and Applications, 3rd ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
18.Greenacre, MJ (2007) Correspondence Analysis in Practice, 2nd ed. Boca Raton, FL: Chapman & Hall/CRC.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
19.Delpeuch, F, Cornu, A, Massamba, JP et al. (1994) Is body mass index sensitively related to socio-economic status and to economic adjustment? A case study from the Congo. Eur J Clin Nutr 48, Suppl. 3, S141S147.Google ScholarPubMed
20.Hosmer, DW & Lemeshow, S (2000) Applied Logistic Regression, 2nd ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21.Korn, EL & Graubard, BI (1999) Analysis of Health Surveys. New York: John Wiley & Sons Inc.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
22.Neven, D, Reardon, T, Chege, J et al. (2006) Supermarkets and consumers in Africa – the case of Nairobi, Kenya. J Int Food Agribus Mark 18, 103123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
23.Mission Economique de Tunis, Tunisie (2006) La distribution agroalimentaire en Tunisie. Tunis: UBIFRANCE.Google Scholar
24.Reardon, T & Berdegue, JA (2006) The Retail-Led Transformation of Agrifood Systems and its Implications for Development Policies – A Background Paper Prepared for the World Bank’s World Development Report 2008: Agriculture for Development. Santiago: Rimisp, Latin American Center for Rural Development.Google Scholar
25.Porter, G, Lyon, F, Potts, Det al. (2004) Improving market institutions and urban food supplies for the urban poor: a comparative study of Nigeria and Zambia: scoping phase. Literature review R8330. http://www.dur.ac.uk/nigerian.marketing/Improving%20market%institutions%and%urban%food%supplies.pdf (accessed December 2008).Google Scholar
26.Desjeux, D (2003) La cathédrale, le caddie et la caméra: les voies cachées de l’institutionnalisation de la consommation. Agrobiosciences Almanach 2003, 7275.Google Scholar
27.Beaulac, J, Kristjansson, E & Cummins, S (2009) A systematic review of food deserts, 1966–2007. Prev Chronic Dis 6, A105.Google ScholarPubMed
28.Cummins, S & Macintyre, S (2002) ‘Food deserts’ – evidence and assumption in health policy making. BMJ 325, 436438.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
29.Cummins, S, Petticrew, M, Sparks, L et al. (2005) Large scale food retail interventions and diet. BMJ 330, 683684.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
30.Murakami, K, Sasaki, S, Takahashi, Y et al. (2009) Neighborhood food store availability in relation to food intake in young Japanese women. Nutrition 25, 640646.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
31.Song, HJ, Gittelsohn, J, Kim, M et al. (2009) A corner store intervention in a low-income urban community is associated with increased availability and sales of some healthy foods. Public Health Nutr 12, 20602067.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
32.Rothman, KJ & Greenland, S (1998) Modern Epidemiology. Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.Google Scholar
33.Minten, B (2008) The food retail revolution in poor countries: is it coming or is it over? Econ Dev Cult Change 56, 767789.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
34.Asfaw, A (2008) Does supermarket purchase affect the dietary practices of households? Some empirical evidence from Guatemala. Dev Policy Rev 26, 227243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Socio-economic and demographic characteristics of the sample, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006

Figure 1

Table 2 Associations of socio-economic characteristics with use of large (LSM) or medium-sized supermarkets (MSM) for main food shopping, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006 (n 703)

Figure 2

Table 3 Reasons stated for choice of type of food retail outlet, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006 (n 724)

Figure 3

Fig. 1 Bi-plot of the first two axes of the correspondence analysis of reasons stated for the choice of type of food outlet, Greater Tunis, Tunisia, 2006. Labels are centred on (x, y) coordinates; SM, supermarket