Transition towards Sustainability: Adoption of Eco-Products among Consumers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
3. Hypotheses Development
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Research Context Description
4.2. Questionnaire Development for Data Collection
4.3. Data Collection and Sample Characteristics
5. Results and Discussion
5.1. Construct Validity of the Measurement Model
Common Method Variance
5.2. Analysis of Conceptual Model and Hypotheses Testing
5.3. Differences between Genders
6. Conclusions
6.1. Summary of Findings
6.2. Policy and Managerial Implications
6.3. Theoretical Implications, Contributions, and Limitations of the Study
6.4. Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors and Year of Publication | Journal | Sample | Determinants | Main Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
[20] Al Mamun et al. (2018) | Journal of Environmental Management | 380 low-income household respondents who lived in coastal areas of Peninsular Malaysia | Eco-literacy, Self-efficacy, Attitude towards environmentally friendly products, Subjective norms, Perceived behavioral control | The findings revealed a positive effect of eco-literacy and self-efficacy on attitude towards green products. Subsequently, the findings also showed a positive effect of attitude and perceived behavioral control on intention and consumption of green products. |
[21] Biswas and Roy (2015) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 42 students and 59 faculties (India) | Consumer innovativeness, Contextual factor, Environmental attitude, Value-for-money, Social value, Conditional value, Epistemic value | Results confirmed consumers’ price and knowledge perceptions to be the major determinants of the behavioral outcome of sustained green consumption, and behavioral intention to pay the green price premium is the outcome of sustained green consumption. |
[22] Bittar (2018) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 255 respondents from United States | Environmental consciousness, Price perception, Brand equity | This research showed that consumers’ environmental consciousness does not affect their purchase decision, demonstrating that consumers’ decision is based on brand and price. The study concludes that brand equity is an important factor in leveraging remanufactured sales, but it is intrinsically associated with price setting. Consumer environmental consciousness has no impact on remanufactured sales, highlighting the importance of the economic side to consumer purchasing decisions. |
[23] Carfora et al. (2017) | Journal of Environmental Psychology | 220 respondents from southern Italy | Attitude towards each proenvironmental behavior, Subjective norm, Perceived Behavioral Control, Proenvironmental self-identity | The findings showed that proenvironmental self-identity significantly moderated the impact of perceived behavioral control on intentions and the effect of past behavior on both intentions and behaviors. |
[24] Cerri et al. (2018) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 7627 questionnaires from Italy | Environmental concern, Importance given to ecological labels and certifications, Importance assigned to communication campaigns, Product quality, Perceived availability of sustainable products | Attitudes towards the products were the main predictors of green product purchasing and were influenced by consumer’s attitudes towards eco labels, whose marginal effect decreased as environmental concern increased. |
[25] Chekima et al. (2016) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 405 consumers from Malaysia | Environmental attitude, Eco-label, Man–nature orientation | Results indicate that environmental attitude, eco-label, and cultural value (man–nature orientation) significantly influence green purchase intention. The result also indicates that the premium price has no moderating effect, denying its role as one of the main barriers for consumers to “walk their talk”, as previously reported by studies and opinion polls. In addition, the findings revealed that education level and gender have a significant positive moderation effect. This suggests that green purchase intentions’ motivational factors are greater among highly educated individuals, especially with female consumers. |
[26] Chen and Hung (2016) | Technological Forecasting and Social Change | 406 respondents (Taiwan) | Attitude, Subjective norm, Perceived behavioral control, Social impression, Environmental ethics and beliefs, Environmental consciousness | This study found that the attitude, perceived behavioral control, environmental consciousness of consumers and their environmental ethics and beliefs have a significant positive association with their intention to use green products, whereas the subjective norms of consumers and the social impression of consumers are positively but not significantly correlated to their intentions towards using green products. |
[27] Choi and Johnson (2019) | Sustainable Production and Consumption | 284 adults (USA) | Environmental concern, Environmental knowledge, Perceived environmental effectiveness, Novelty seeking, Adventurous spirit, Attitude, Subjective norm, Perceived behavioral control | Findings support the claim that it is situation and issue-specific motivations that are direct constructs of a specific behavior rather than general motivations. Environmental knowledge had an appreciable effect in explaining purchase intention but environmental concern did not. When novelty seeking was controlled, adventurous spirit accounted for no additional variance in purchase intention. |
[28] Do Paço et al. (2019) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 471 individuals from the UK and Portugal | General prosocial attitudes, Green consumption values, Receptivity to green communication | The results convey how general prosocial attitudes have a direct influence on green consumption values and show that green values positively influence green buying behavior and receptivity to green advertising. However, green advertising generates only a weak influence on green buying behaviors. |
[29] Follows and Jobber (2000) | European Journal of Marketing | 160 women, following the birth of their baby in a maternity hospital in Nova Scotia, Canada | Self-transcendence, Conservation, Self-enhancement, Environmental consequences, Individual consequences | The hierarchical structure proposed in the model, from abstract values to product specific attitudes, to intention, to purchase behavior, was confirmed. Both environmental and individual consequences of purchasing diapers were linked to behavior through intention. |
[30] Foukaras and Toma (2014) | Procedia Economics and Finance | Eurobarometer data: 479 Cypriot citizens and 967 Swedish citizens | Gender, Education, Occupation, Eco-labelling in products, Trust political parties, Information related to general environmental issues, Worries about climate change, Perceived ability to play a role in protecting the environment, Consider environmental aspects in large expenditures | Results show that policy measures could be targeted to deal with situational factors (e.g., availability of recycling services) (more so in Cyprus than in Sweden); improving access to trusted information sources and better targeting information (especially on environmental impacts of specific behaviors) to different population groups, e.g., by income and gender (in both Cyprus and Sweden); and improving labelling for ecological products (more so in Cyprus than in Sweden). |
[31] Gonçalves et al. (2016) | Journal of Business Research | 197 responses from students in executive courses at Portuguese University and on the Facebook page of a supermarket chain that sells biological products | Functional value, Social value, Emotional value, Conditional value, Epistemic value | The results show that the functional value is almost always necessary but is not sufficient by itself for predicting green buying. However, three “causal recipes” formed with the functional value are sufficient. These recipes use the emotional, conditional, and social values combined individually with the functional value. Three other combinations of consumption values are also sufficient for predicting green buying. In contrast, the absence of the functional value is a sufficient condition for not green buying, as well as three other “causal recipes”. |
[32] Grimmer and Bingham (2013) | Journal of Business Research | 698 residents in Hobart, the capital of Tasmania, Australia | Perceived environmental performance of a company, Environmental involvement | Participants report higher purchase intention for products from high versus low perceived environmental performance (PEP) companies, and that participants’ environmental involvement (EI) and product price moderate this relationship. Those with high EI report greater purchase intention for high PEP companies and the reverse for low PEP companies, indicating that participants with high EI are more positively influenced by their perceptions of a company’s environmental performance. However, participants are more likely to favor a high PEP company when the relative price of a product is low versus high, irrespective of their level of EI. |
[33] Huang et al. (2014) | International Journal of Hospitality Management | 458 hotel guests (Shanghai, China) | Environmental consciousness, Cash discount incentives, Environmental protective alternatives | The results show that environmental protection consciousness positively affects green consumer behavior. Cash discount incentives have no effect on the choice of hotel guests to reuse their bed sheet or towels; on the contrary, environmental protective alternatives are great incentives for hotel guests to maintain environmentally friendly behavior. Regarding the demographics of hotels guests, female and younger guests are more inclined to be environmentally friendly. |
[34] Jaiswal and Kant (2018) | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | 351 Indian consumers | Attitude towards green products, Environmental concern, Perceived consumer effectiveness, Perceived environmental knowledge | Green purchase intention (GPI) was significantly and directly driven by Attitude towards green products (AGP), Environmental concern (EC), and Perceived consumer effectiveness (PCE) directly and indirectly via the mediating role of AGP; however, perceived environmental knowledge (PEK) was found to have an insignificant effect on both AGP and GPI in this study. Moreover, the measure of GPI was found to be the fundamental predictor of green purchase behavior (GPB) in the model. |
[17] Joshi and Rahman (2015) | International Strategic Management Review | Review of 53 empirical articles on green purchase behavior from 2000 to 2014 | N/A | Environmental concerns, product attributes, environmental knowledge and subjective norms emerged as major drivers, whereas high price, low availability, and lack of consumer trust in green products emerged as major barriers to purchase of green products. |
[35] Joshi and Rahman (2019) | Ecological Economics | 425 young consumers from India | Drive for environmental responsibility, Spirituality, Perceived consumer effectiveness, Attitude towards sustainable purchasing, Perceived marketplace influence, Consumers’ knowledge regarding sustainability-related issues | Results indicate that the drive for environmental responsibility, spirituality, and perceived consumer effectiveness are the key psychological determinants of consumers’ sustainable purchase decisions. |
[36] Judge et al. (2019) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 330 Australian residents who had recently purchased property were recruited via an online panel provider | Attitudes, Subjective norms, Perceived behavioral control | Attitudes, subjective norms, perceived behavioral control, and green consumer identity each independently predicted higher intentions to purchase a sustainability-certified dwelling, and altogether accounted for 65% of the variance in intentions. Green consumer identity also significantly moderated the effect of subjective norms on intentions. In a separate analysis, the two strongest predictors of willingness to pay for a sustainability certification were familiarity with current sustainability certifications and subjective norms. |
[37] Kabadayı et al. (2015) | Procedia—Social and Behavioral Sciences | 172 university students (Turkey) | Consumer’s guilt, Self-monitoring, Perceived consumer effectiveness | The study revealed that perceived consumer effectiveness is the most influential construct on green purchase intention. Consumer guilt has been found to have both direct and indirect enhancing effects on green purchase intention of young consumers. |
[38] Kanchanapibul et al. (2014) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 110 responses from young generation (less than 30 years old; UK) | Person’s effect, Knowledge | The analysis result confirms that the ecological effect and knowledge are significant in determining young consumers’ green involvement as well as their actual purchase. |
[39] Khan and Mohsin (2017) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 260 respondents (customers who frequent a monthly organic produce market in Lahore, Pakistan) | Functional value (price, quality) Social value, Conditional value, Epistemic value, Environmental value, Emotional value | The results indicate that functional value (price), social value, and environmental value have a positive impact on green product consumer choice behavior, whereas conditional value and epistemic value have a negative effect. Functional value (quality) and emotional value do not influence green product consumer choice behavior. As a moderator, emotional value has a significant effect on the role of functional value, social value, conditional value, epistemic value, and environmental value. |
[40] Kilbourne and Pickett (2008) | Journal of Business Research | A random telephone survey of 337 US adults | Materialistic values, Environmental beliefs, Environmental concern | The study demonstrates that materialism has a negative effect on environmental beliefs, and these beliefs positively affect environmental concern and environmentally responsible behaviors. |
[41] Kumar et al. (2017) | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | 235 students pursuing postgraduate and doctoral studies in a leading management school in India | Environmental knowledge, Attitude, Subjective norm | The attitude towards environmentally sustainable products mediates the relationship between environmental knowledge and purchase intention. Next, this mediated relationship is moderated by environmental knowledge. Third, the subjective norm is not significantly related to the purchase intention—contrary to established findings—in a collectivistic culture considered in this study. Last but not least, the direction of subjective norm as a moderator on relationship between environmental knowledge and attitude is not supported. |
[42] Lai and Cheng (2016) | The Social Science Journal | 266 responses from local undergraduate students (Hong Kong) | Green marketing practice, Consumers’ attitudes towards the environment, Perceived seriousness of environmental problems, Perceived environmental responsibility | This study finds that undergraduate students’ views of the importance of green marketing practices are primarily related to their environmental attitudes and their perceived environmental responsibility and the perceived seriousness of environmental problems, whereas their attitudes and perceived responsibility are in turn related to their willingness to purchase green products. |
[43] Liobikienė et al. (2016) | Ecological Economics | Eurobarometer survey conducted in 2012 (covering all the EU countries; due to lack of data, only Luxemburg is excluded) | Knowledge of green products, Confidence in green products, Subjective norms, Perceived behavioral control | The subjective norms and interaction of knowledge and confidence in green products significantly determined the green purchase behavior in all countries. According to the cross-culture studies, all cultural dimensions did not have significant influence on green purchase behavior. However, cultural dimensions are related to factors which directly influence green purchase behavior. |
[44] Liobikienė et al. (2017) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 2012 Eurobarometer’s survey (868 respondents from Lithuania and 857 respondents from Austria) | Gender, Environmentally friendly behavior, Environmentally friendly social norm, Importance of product price | The results showed that green purchase behavior was significantly related to environmentally friendly behavior; however, the determinants were different. The environmentally friendly social norms and gender had a significant impact on both green purchase and environmentally friendly behavior. Meanwhile, the importance of product prices negatively influenced only purchase behavior. |
[45] Mobrezi and Khoshtinat (2016) | Procedia Economics and Finance | 279 women consumers living in western Tehran (Iran) | Subjective norms, Personal naturalism, Social impacts, Positive attitude towards green product, Environmental concern, Personal self-image | The results show that positive attitude towards green products affects personal self-image, social impacts, and willingness to buy green products. The willingness to buy green products does not affect environmental concerns and subjective norms; therefore, consumers’ willingness to buy green products increases with increasing environmental concerns. However, positive attitude towards green products does not affect environmental concerns, subjective norms, and personal naturalism. Willingness to buy green products also does not affect the social impact or personal self-image. |
[46] Moser (2016) | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | German nationwide panel (N = 1760) | Attitude, Personal norms, Willingness to pay | Results show that consumers care for the environment and mirror environmental attitudes in their purchasing behavior (self-reported). In particular, norms and willingness to pay are strong predictors of self-reported purchasing behavior (SRB). However, SRB is not transferred to actual purchasing behavior. |
[47] Mostafa (2009) | Expert Systems with Applications | 418 responses from citizens in Kuwait | Perceived environmental knowledge, Environmental concern, Skepticism towards environmental claims | The results show that major variables affecting green consumption are related to altruistic values, environmental concern, environmental knowledge, skepticism towards environmental claims, attitudes towards green consumption, and intention to buy green products. |
[48] Nguyen et al. (2016) | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | 682 shoppers in large electronic appliance stores (Vietnam) | Biospheric values, Environmental protection, Subjective norm, Perceived inconvenience, Environmental self-identity | The findings reveal that biospheric values encourage active engagement in proenvironmental purchasing behavior by enhancing consumers’ attitudes towards environmental protection, their subjective norms and environmental self-identity, and by mitigating their perceived inconvenience associated with eco-friendly products. Additionally, these findings were moderated by consumers’ past purchasing behavior. |
[49] Paul et al. (2016) | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | 521 Indian consumers | Environmental concern, Attitude, Subjective norm, Perceived behavioral control | Consumer attitude and perceived behavioral control significantly predicts purchase intention, whereas subjective norm does not. Findings also suggest that TPB mediates the relationship between environmental concern and green products purchase intention. An additional construct in the new model considerably contributes to improving the understanding of green products purchase intention formation and could become a sustainable mainstream variable. |
[50] Ritter et al. (2015) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 337 respondents from Porto Alegre, the fourth most populated region in Brazil | Quality of life, Environmental consciousness, Quality and price, Information and knowledge, Social context | The elements of information and knowledge, environmental attitude, social context, and environmental consciousness were strongly correlated with green consumption. However, the quality and price of green products has shown a weaker relationship with consumption. |
[51] Roberts (1996) | Journal of Business Research | 582 adult consumers from a nationwide survey | Perceived consumer effectiveness, Environmental concern | Perceived consumer effectiveness was found to be the best predictor of ecologically conscious consumer behavior. |
[52] Sreen et al. (2018) | Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services | 452 educated Indian consumers who are at least graduates | Attitude towards green products, Subjective norms, Perceived behavioral control | The findings of the study suggest that collectivism is significantly related to all three predictors (attitude, subjective norms, and internal perceived behavioral control) of green purchase intention, whereas long-term orientation is insignificantly related to attitude towards green products while examining the direct effects. Green purchase intention is also significantly related to man–nature orientation. |
[53] Suki (2016) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 200 members of the public in the Federal Territory of Labuan, Malaysia | Functional value (price, quality), Social value, Emotional value, Conditional value, Epistemic value, Environmental concern | Empirical results disclosed that social value has the greatest impact on consumer environmental concern, as shown in the purchase of green products, and that epistemic value and functional value quality come next. However, functional value price, emotional value, and conditional value make no contribution to the purchase of green products as a result of consumers’ environmental concern. |
[54] Sun et al. (2019) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 3356 observations in China (30 provinces, not including Tibet) | Environmental knowledge, Environmental concern, Environmental attitude, Environmental stress, Environmental perceived validity | At the individual level, population factors and the external environment have a greater impact on green consumer behavior, because psychological factors, environmental attitudes, and environmental awareness promote green consumption. Environmental issues affect green consumption indirectly by affecting environmental knowledge in the external environment. In the external environment, environmental pressure and environmental knowledge have a positive impact on green consumption behavior. Media preferences influence green consumption through environmental perception. Among demographic factors, education affects green consumption through environmental perception; age and urban or rural household registration also affect green consumption behavior. At the level of environmental pollution, environmental tendencies positively influence green consumption. Of these, urbanization has the strongest impact on green consumption. Consumption levels and the rates of greening and Internet penetration have no significant impact on green consumption. |
[55] Tan et al. (2016) | Australasian Marketing Journal | 5210 usable responses from Australia and 304 from New Zealand | Consumers’ green perception | Researchers identified five dimensions underpinning consumers’ green perceptions. These include “product perception”, “hard to be green”, “green stigma”, “perceived sense of responsibility”, and “readiness to be green”. This paper demonstrates the explanatory power of consumers’ green perceptions in predicting green consumption behavior, in particular their likelihood to purchase green household products. |
[56] Taufique and Vaithianathan (2018) | Journal of Cleaner Production | 175 responses from India (Hyderabad, New Delhi, and Kolkata) | Attitude towards environment, Subjective norm, Perceived consumer effectiveness | The results show that attitudes and perceived consumer effectiveness both have a significant direct and indirect positive influence on ecologically conscious consumer behavior. However, the subjective norm seems not to have any significant influence on behavioral intention leading to ecologically conscious consumer behavior. |
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[59] Turkyilmaz et al. (2015) | Procedia—Social and Behavioral Sciences | 416 respondents (Turkey) | Inward environmental attitude, Outward environmental attitude | One’s inward environmental attitude positively affects his/her green purchasing behavior, and green purchasing behavior positively affects product satisfaction. Also, one’s outward environmental attitude positively affects his/her general environmental behavior, and general environmental behavior positively affects life satisfaction. |
[60] Vantamay (2018) | Kasetsart Journal of Social Sciences | 1000 university students in Thailand | Attitude towards the behavior, Subjective norm, Perceived behavioral control | The results showed that all three independent variables derived from TPB (Attitude towards the behavior, Subjective norm, and Perceived behavioral control) can copredict the intention to perform sustainable consumption behavior. |
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Latent Variables and Their Measurement Items | Completely Standardized Loading | p | Composite Reliability | AVE | Cronbach’s Alpha |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Consumers’ environmental concern | 0.845 | 0.525 | 0.842 | ||
We are approaching the limit of the number of people the earth can support. | 0.55 | ||||
If things continue on their present course, we will soon experience an ecological catastrophe. | 0.79 | * | |||
The earth is like a spaceship with very limited room and resources. | 0.65 | * | |||
I am concerned about the effect of global warming. | 0.81 | * | |||
I am concerned about air quality. | 0.79 | * | |||
Consumers’ consciousness of eco-products Please rate your consciousness about presence of: | 0.928 | 0.682 | 0.925 | ||
ecological labels in the eco-products | 0.86 | ||||
environmental certification of the eco-products | 0.87 | * | |||
nonpolluting ingredients in the eco-products | 0.85 | * | |||
recyclable packaging of the eco-products | 0.80 | * | |||
opportunity for cost reduction using the eco-products | 0.76 | * | |||
nice and clean appearance of the eco-products | 0.81 | * | |||
Consumers’ familiarity with eco-products Please rate your familiarity of: | 0.929 | 0.724 | 0.923 | ||
environmental issues | 0.80 | ||||
environmental solutions | 0.89 | * | |||
ecological (green) labeling/standards | 0.81 | * | |||
environmental benefits of eco-products | 0.90 | * | |||
economic benefits of eco-products | 0.85 | * | |||
Consumers’ perceived sense of environmental responsibility | 0.710 | 0.449 | 0.674 | ||
I cannot help to slow down environmental deterioration. | 0.64 | * | |||
I do not need to do anything because the environment is not a major concern in Slovenia. | 0.68 | * | |||
I do not feel responsible for the environment. | 0.69 | * | |||
Consumers’ purchase intention of eco-friendly packaged products | 0.923 | 0.799 | 0.925 | ||
I would buy eco-friendly packaged products in the near future. | 0.89 | ||||
I plan to buy eco-friendly packaged products on a regular basis. | 0.85 | * | |||
I intend to buy eco-friendly packaged products because they are more environmentally friendly. | 0.94 | * |
Sample Data Demographic Characteristics | Frequency | Percentage (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 351 | 49.8 |
Female | 354 | 50.2 | |
Age | 18–34 years | 109 | 15.5 |
35–44 years | 118 | 16.7 | |
45–54 years | 145 | 20.6 | |
55–64 years | 147 | 20.9 | |
65 years and above | 179 | 25.4 | |
Education | Elementary school | 7 | 1.1 |
High school | 481 | 68.3 | |
Bachelor’s degree | 190 | 26.9 | |
Specialization, MBA, master’s degree, or PhD | 26 | 3.7 |
EC | CC | CF | CPER | PI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
EC | 1 | ||||
CC | 0.56 * | 1 | |||
CF | 0.39 * | 0.62 * | 1 | ||
CPR | 0.27 * | 0.23 * | 0.14 * | 1 | |
PI | 0.48 * | 0.63 * | 0.49 * | 0.29 * | 1 |
Gender | Environmental Concern | Consciousness of Eco-Products | Consumers’ Environmental Familiarity | Perceived Sense of Environmental Responsibility | Green Purchase Intention | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | M | SD | |
Female | 5.593 | 1.165 | 5.450 | 1.308 | 4.674 | 1.330 | 5.797 | 1.309 | 5.708 | 1.298 |
Male | 5.297 | 1.311 | 4.987 | 1.366 | 4.483 | 1.389 | 5.531 | 1.243 | 5.526 | 1.362 |
F ratio Sig. | 10.059 * (0.002) | 21.072 * (0.000) | 3.482 (0.062) | 7.620 * (0.006) | 3.289 (0.070) |
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Hojnik, J.; Ruzzier, M.; Konečnik Ruzzier, M. Transition towards Sustainability: Adoption of Eco-Products among Consumers. Sustainability 2019, 11, 4308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164308
Hojnik J, Ruzzier M, Konečnik Ruzzier M. Transition towards Sustainability: Adoption of Eco-Products among Consumers. Sustainability. 2019; 11(16):4308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164308
Chicago/Turabian StyleHojnik, Jana, Mitja Ruzzier, and Maja Konečnik Ruzzier. 2019. "Transition towards Sustainability: Adoption of Eco-Products among Consumers" Sustainability 11, no. 16: 4308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164308
APA StyleHojnik, J., Ruzzier, M., & Konečnik Ruzzier, M. (2019). Transition towards Sustainability: Adoption of Eco-Products among Consumers. Sustainability, 11(16), 4308. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11164308