3.8 Article

The emerging geography of e-commerce in British retailing

Journal

REGIONAL STUDIES REGIONAL SCIENCE
Volume 2, Issue 1, Pages 371-391

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/21681376.2015.1054420

Keywords

e-commerce; retail; geography; grocery; UK

Categories

Funding

  1. ESRC [RES-187-24-0015]
  2. ESRC [RES-187-24-0015] Funding Source: UKRI

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This paper explores the growth of e-commerce in British grocery retailing and examines the spatial variations in e-commerce usage. The main data source is a large commercial consumer survey (Acxiom's Research Opinion Data) rarely used by academics to date. Using these data in combination with census data, the paper addresses a number of key questions. After outlining key trends in the dataset on e-commerce usage (by product and over time) the first research question is: How do e-commerce purchases vary by geodemographic group? To answer this question, we explore e-commerce usage by age, sex and social class. The second key question is: Does e-commerce usage vary by type of geographical region? Thus, we explore variations in usage for urban and rural areas. The dynamics of urban-rural diffusion are also addressed here - by examining, in addition, the spread of broadband use across Britain. The last question is: To what degree do e-commerce sales vary by access to physical stores? This is addressed by examining consumers' home locations in relation to geographical accessibility. The results show that age and income are crucial demographic discriminators of e-commerce usage, as is rural location versus urban, and distance from physical stores.

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