3.8 Article

Demystifying Horizontal/Vertical Cultural Difference in Green Consumption: A Cross-Cultural Comparative Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL CONSUMER MARKETING
Volume 33, Issue 5, Pages 543-558

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/08961530.2020.1857669

Keywords

Culture; horizontal individualism; vertical collectivism; environmental responsibility; consumers' attitude toward green products; purchase intentions

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This study examines the influence of cultural values on consumers' attitude toward green products and purchase intentions in Finland and Pakistan, finding that environmental responsibility mediates the relationship between cultural values and consumer attitude. The results suggest that practitioners can develop culturally appropriate green marketing strategies based on these findings.
To understand green consumption in cross-cultural context, this study examines the influence of horizontal individualism (HI-Finnish) and vertical collectivism (VC-Pakistani) cultural values on consumers' attitude toward green products and purchase intentions. Besides, the mediating role of environmental responsibility is examined for the relationship between these cultural values and consumers' attitude toward green products. Partial Least Square structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) analysis are performed to measure the significance of the hypothesized model and to assess differences between these two countries. This study empirically validates that these cultural variations can determine green consumption by consumers in each country. The results show an insignificant influence of horizontal individualism and vertical collectivism cultural values on consumers' attitude toward green products, but a positive influence on environmental responsibility. The impact of environmental responsibility on consumers' attitude toward green products and of their attitude toward green products on purchase intention was also positive. Environmental responsibility plays the role of a full mediator between cultural values and consumers' attitude toward green products. The findings of this study may help practitioners in the development of culturally appropriate green marketing and advertising strategies.

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