Where Do They Come From and Where Do They Go? Socioeconomic Patterns in Dog Acquisition and Rehoming

Author:

Kremer Tom1ORCID,Neal Sue M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Austin Pets Alive, Austin, TX 78703, USA

2. Department of Political Science, Arkansas State University, Jonesboro, AR 72401, USA

Abstract

This research examines the ways people acquire dogs in the US as well as the ways the dogs leave the household and the way these differ by income level in seven geographically diverse study communities. A web-based panel survey was distributed and received 6318 responses. Individuals were asked a series of demographic and socioeconomic questions as well as how they acquired their current dogs, how previous dogs left their household, and where they left to. The results indicate that the likelihood of acquiring a dog through friends and family decreased monotonically as income increased, while the opposite was observed for adopting and purchasing a dog. The likelihood of giving a dog away to a friend or family member also decreased as income increased, as opposed to shelter surrender—a person earning over USD 100,000 annually was more than four times likelier to surrender to a shelter than a person earning under USD 15,000. The results suggest a stronger reliance on informal social networks in lower-income communities for both obtaining and placing dogs. As these dogs would otherwise end up in the shelter system, animal shelters may support low-income pet owners to help keep their dogs within their community of care.

Funder

Mars Global Pet Healthcare

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference19 articles.

1. American Pet Products Association (2019). The 2017–2018 APPA National Pet Owners Survey, American Pet Products Association, Stamford, Connecticut.

2. American Pet Products Association (2022). The 2021–2022 APPA National Pet Owners Survey, American Pet Products Association, Stamford, Connecticut.

3. American Veterinary Medical Association AVMA (2018). Pet Ownership and Demographics Sourcebook, American Pet Products Association, Stamford, Connecticut.

4. (2024, February 29). Best Friends Consumer Adoption Research Analysis. Available online: https://network.bestfriends.org/sites/default/files/inline-files/ConsumerAdoptionAnalysis_full_version.7.14.2022.pdf.

5. No Dog Left Behind: A Hedonic Pricing Model for Animal Shelters;Reese;J. Appl. Anim. Welf. Sci.,2017

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