Food preferences are often influenced by environmental cues such as temperature, scent, and sound. Although air pollution is a subtle but daily presence in consumers’ lives, a lack of marketing research exists on whether and how it affects food preferences. This article theorizes that as a natural stressor, air pollution can induce bad moods in people and in turn lead to an increase in unhealthy food preferences. We combine three complementary methodologies to test our hypotheses. Based on large-scale, daily search data, the results of our econometric analysis reveal that people are more prone to search for unhealthy foods when local air pollution is higher. A field study demonstrates that air pollution increases consumer purchases of unhealthy food. Finally, we validate the proposed mechanism through a randomized experiment.
The opposite can be argued for good mood. We have conducted a separate analysis using good mood. The results are consistent, i.e. opposite of that of bad mood. We relegate the related analysis to Web Appendix 2 to reduce repetition.
We performed a series of robustness checks, including using PM2.5 and PM10 to measure air pollution, using a dichotomous version of AQI, alternative standard error, 2SLS, and alternative construction of DV. The findings are robust. Please see Web Appendix 6-9 for details.
Some categories are not perceived as very healthy or very unhealthy, so we focused on the top food with unanimous perceptions. For example, people rated Jia Duo Bao drink as not strictly healthy or unhealthy.
We also estimated the model using perceived air quality and the dichotomous version of AQI (good vs. unhealthy). The results are robust. Please see Web Appendix 11 for details.