The Effects of Shopping Well-Being and Shopping Ill-Being on Consumer Life Satisfaction

被引:0
作者
Ahmet Ekici
M. Joseph Sirgy
Dong-Jin Lee
Grace B. Yu
Michael Bosnjak
机构
[1] Bilkent University,Department of Management
[2] Virginia Tech,Virginia Tech Real Estate Professor of Marketing, Department of Marketing
[3] Yonsei University,Department of Marketing
[4] Duksung Women’s University,Department of Business Administration
[5] University of Mannheim,GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences
来源
Applied Research in Quality of Life | 2018年 / 13卷
关键词
Shopping well-being; Shopping ill-being; Subjective well-being; Life satisfaction; Quality of life; Materialism; Compulsive shopping; Shopping engagement;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Individuals hold two distinct sets of beliefs about shopping activities: Positive beliefs regarding the degree to which shopping contributes to quality of life (shopping well-being), and negative beliefs related to the degree to which shopping activities result in overspending time, effort, and money (shopping ill-being). Shopping well-being and shopping ill-being are conceptualized as independent constructs in that shopping ill-being is not treated as negative polar of a single dimension. That is, one can experience both shopping well-being as well as shopping ill-being, simultaneously. We hypothesized that (1) shopping well-being is a positive predictor of life satisfaction, (2) shopping ill-being is a negative predictor of life satisfaction, and (3) shopping well-being does contribute to life satisfaction under conditions of low than high shopping ill-being. The study surveyed 1035 respondents in the UK. The study results supported hypotheses 1 and 3, not Hypothesis 2. The paper discusses the implications of these findings for retailers, macro-marketers, and policy makers.
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页码:333 / 353
页数:20
相关论文
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