Prolificacy of Green Consumption Orientation and Environmental Knowledge to Slash Plastic Bag Consumption: The Moderating Role of Consumer Attitudes and the Demarketing Efforts

The use of plastic bags has long been a global concern due to its hazardous contributions to the environment. Firms, governments, and special interest groups (like Greenpeace) have always earnestly ventured, through their individual or collaborative initiatives, strategies and/or (demarketing) campa...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2023-07, Vol.15 (13), p.10136
Hauptverfasser: Yaqub, Muhammad Zafar, Yaqub, Rana Muhammad Shahid, Riaz, Tahira, Alamri, Hani Abdulrehman
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container_issue 13
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creator Yaqub, Muhammad Zafar
Yaqub, Rana Muhammad Shahid
Riaz, Tahira
Alamri, Hani Abdulrehman
description The use of plastic bags has long been a global concern due to its hazardous contributions to the environment. Firms, governments, and special interest groups (like Greenpeace) have always earnestly ventured, through their individual or collaborative initiatives, strategies and/or (demarketing) campaigns, to discourage the use of plastic bags to ensure a healthy and sustainable planet. However, such initiatives are least likely to produce desired results if the most important stakeholder i.e., consumers do not perceive greater value from such a reduction in usage of plastic bags. Considering the same an important precondition for building positive intentions and consequent behaviors to reduce plastic bag usage and a complementor of demarketing efforts of the stakeholders, the primary purpose of this study has been to investigate the role of consumers’ green orientation, environmental knowledge, and perceived instrumentality of demarketing efforts in enhancing the perceived value of plastic usage curtailment. Based on PLS-based structural equation modelling performed on a data set comprising 977 consumers, it has been found that the three antecedents namely green consumption orientation, recycling attitudes and demarketing efforts have direct positive effects on the outcome construct. Besides, the study also found that the effect of green consumption orientation on perceived value of plastic usage reduction is significantly and positively moderated by consumers’ recycling attitudes and their perceived effectiveness of demarketing efforts. The findings offer some useful insights and implications to the theory, practice and the policy making for boosting pro-environmental behaviors.
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Air pollution
Attitudes
Consumer behavior
Consumer preferences
Consumers
Consumption
Developing countries
Environmental activism
Environmental behavior
Environmental sustainability
Hazardous areas
Hypotheses
Interest groups
LDCs
Marketing research
Multivariate statistical analysis
Outdoor air quality
Pakistan
Plastics
Pressure groups
Public health
Recycling
Recycling (Waste, etc.)
Social marketing
Sustainable development
Water pollution
title Prolificacy of Green Consumption Orientation and Environmental Knowledge to Slash Plastic Bag Consumption: The Moderating Role of Consumer Attitudes and the Demarketing Efforts
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