Consumer Ethnocentricity within the Environment of Economic Crisis

Authors

  • Zuzana Kreckova University of Economics
  • Jitka Odehnalova University of Economics
  • James Reardon University of Northern Colorado

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5755/j01.ee.23.3.1932

Keywords:

ethnocentricity, cosmopolitanism, national identity, consumer behavior, country-of-origin, Czech consumer

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to examine consumer tendencies within the economic crisis, to examine consumer ethnocentrism (CE) among CEE consumers and its character and influence on buying domestic and foreign products. Based on broad existing theoretical and empirical knowledge, we constructed measures for this research derived from existing literature. The hypotheses were tested through structural equation modeling. The analyzed sample consisted of 199 Czech respondents. The results confirm effect of CE on buying behavior as well as national identity influence on CE. In the Czech context, CE significantly and positively influenced domestic purchase behavior. Alternatively, there was only a marginal influence of CE supported its negative effect on foreign purchase behavior. Cosmopolitanism did not affect CE in the Czech context. Therefore, the research findings suggest a prevalent influence of CE on buying behavior under conditions of economic crisis. The paper concentrates on ignored area that was very hard hit by economic crisis in Central and Eastern Europe. The findings provide useful information to marketing specialists in designing their marketing strategies for local “made-in” communication campaigns. In addition, implications for retailers to evaluate their merchandise assortment portfolio are implied from the findings. We build on the positive influence of CE on buying behavior of domestic products versus foreign, and infer preference for freshness and quality of goods. This suggest implications for public policy implications related to local job creation and employment, especially within the area of small local producers, self-employment, development of local agriculture, as well as countryside maintenance. This issue seems to gain more importance and attention given the nature of the global economic crisis for consumers, producers, retailers and government. Potentially, there appears to be significant carryover effect related to the present and future integration processes of the CEE economies.

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5755/j01.ee.23.3.1932

Additional Files

Published

2012-06-19

Issue

Section

THE ECONOMIC CONDITIONS OF ENTERPRISE FUNCTIONING