Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries

Halal industries play important roles in developing Malaysian economy with its halal product export reached RM7768.4 million from January to March this year alone. The main halal exports are food ingredients which valued for RM2521.9 million, followed by food and beverages which valued for RM3140...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi, Abdul Rahman, Russly, Ab. Majid, Mahmood Zuhdi, Deuraseh, Nurdeng, Ramli, Mohd Anuar, Jamaludin, Mohammad Aizat
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/42739/1/Eating_Culture_among_ASEAN_Countries_and_Its_Implication.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/42739/
http://www.mihrec2014.upm.edu.my/index.html
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.iium.irep.42739
record_format dspace
spelling my.iium.irep.42739 http://irep.iium.edu.my/42739/ Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi Abdul Rahman, Russly Ab. Majid, Mahmood Zuhdi Deuraseh, Nurdeng Ramli, Mohd Anuar Jamaludin, Mohammad Aizat HM621 Culture Halal industries play important roles in developing Malaysian economy with its halal product export reached RM7768.4 million from January to March this year alone. The main halal exports are food ingredients which valued for RM2521.9 million, followed by food and beverages which valued for RM3140.8 million and fats and oil derivatives account for RM1449.2 million. Malaysia is now leading in development and establishment of halal certification and became center of references for other country’s certification bodies. With broad export market and variety of resources it creates a brighter sight for Malaysia to be one of the biggest halal exporters in ASEAN. Despite the opportunity and the strength that Malaysia has in halal market, several loopholes which badly affect the halal product export need to be addressed. These include the inadequate information on legislation, social and culture of the importing countries that contribute to fewer acceptances of the exported products. Malaysian industries tend produce food products without proper knowledge of consumer acceptance in their respective importing countries. This paper is an attempt to explore the eating cultures among selected ASEAN countries and its implication on the development of the regional halal industries. Several ASEAN countries which include Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand have been targeted as the respondents for this study. Data was collected from both documents and an in-depth interview with experts from respective countries. Findings show that local preferences on food products is related to several factors which include socio-economics, religion, age, education, social class and the place of culture itself. Different culture in different countries creates a different preference in food consumption. The paper concludes that in order to penetrate the halal products into different ASEAN countries both the producers and the exporters need to understand the local preferences and cultures on food products before embarking into the business. 2014 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/42739/1/Eating_Culture_among_ASEAN_Countries_and_Its_Implication.pdf Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi and Abdul Rahman, Russly and Ab. Majid, Mahmood Zuhdi and Deuraseh, Nurdeng and Ramli, Mohd Anuar and Jamaludin, Mohammad Aizat (2014) Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries. In: Malaysia International Halal Research & Education Conference 2014 (MIHREC 2014), 2-4 December 2014, Marriot Putrajaya Hotel. http://www.mihrec2014.upm.edu.my/index.html
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic HM621 Culture
spellingShingle HM621 Culture
Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi
Abdul Rahman, Russly
Ab. Majid, Mahmood Zuhdi
Deuraseh, Nurdeng
Ramli, Mohd Anuar
Jamaludin, Mohammad Aizat
Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries
description Halal industries play important roles in developing Malaysian economy with its halal product export reached RM7768.4 million from January to March this year alone. The main halal exports are food ingredients which valued for RM2521.9 million, followed by food and beverages which valued for RM3140.8 million and fats and oil derivatives account for RM1449.2 million. Malaysia is now leading in development and establishment of halal certification and became center of references for other country’s certification bodies. With broad export market and variety of resources it creates a brighter sight for Malaysia to be one of the biggest halal exporters in ASEAN. Despite the opportunity and the strength that Malaysia has in halal market, several loopholes which badly affect the halal product export need to be addressed. These include the inadequate information on legislation, social and culture of the importing countries that contribute to fewer acceptances of the exported products. Malaysian industries tend produce food products without proper knowledge of consumer acceptance in their respective importing countries. This paper is an attempt to explore the eating cultures among selected ASEAN countries and its implication on the development of the regional halal industries. Several ASEAN countries which include Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand have been targeted as the respondents for this study. Data was collected from both documents and an in-depth interview with experts from respective countries. Findings show that local preferences on food products is related to several factors which include socio-economics, religion, age, education, social class and the place of culture itself. Different culture in different countries creates a different preference in food consumption. The paper concludes that in order to penetrate the halal products into different ASEAN countries both the producers and the exporters need to understand the local preferences and cultures on food products before embarking into the business.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi
Abdul Rahman, Russly
Ab. Majid, Mahmood Zuhdi
Deuraseh, Nurdeng
Ramli, Mohd Anuar
Jamaludin, Mohammad Aizat
author_facet Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi
Abdul Rahman, Russly
Ab. Majid, Mahmood Zuhdi
Deuraseh, Nurdeng
Ramli, Mohd Anuar
Jamaludin, Mohammad Aizat
author_sort Ab. Rahman, Suhaimi
title Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries
title_short Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries
title_full Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries
title_fullStr Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries
title_full_unstemmed Eating culture among ASEAN countries and its implication towards development of regional Halal industries
title_sort eating culture among asean countries and its implication towards development of regional halal industries
publishDate 2014
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/42739/1/Eating_Culture_among_ASEAN_Countries_and_Its_Implication.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/42739/
http://www.mihrec2014.upm.edu.my/index.html
_version_ 1643616834589556736
score 13.154949