This paper presents the results of a study that examined customer discrimination against fictitious male and female food truck owners with Arabic-sounding names on a Swedish university campus. In a web-based experiment, students (N = 1,406) were asked, in a market survey setting, whether they thought it was a good idea that a food truck was establishing on their campus and of their willingness to pay for a typical food truck meal. Four names—male and female Swedish-sounding names and male and female Arabic-sounding names—were randomly assigned to food trucks. We found no evidence of customer discrimination against food truck owners with Arabic-sounding names. Participants were slightly more positive to a food truck establishment run by a male with an Arabic-sounding name than a male with a Swedish-sounding name.
Migration Letters
Customer Discrimination in the Fast Food Market: A Web–Based Experiment on a Swedish University Campus
Journal Article
Reference
Ahmed, Ali and Mats Hammarstedt (2020). “Customer Discrimination in the Fast Food Market: A Web–Based Experiment on a Swedish University Campus”. Migration Letters 17(6), 813–824. doi.org/10.33182/ml.v17i6.873
Ahmed, Ali and Mats Hammarstedt (2020). “Customer Discrimination in the Fast Food Market: A Web–Based Experiment on a Swedish University Campus”. Migration Letters 17(6), 813–824. doi.org/10.33182/ml.v17i6.873
Authors
Ali Ahmed,
Mats Hammarstedt