2017
DOI: 10.1504/ijetm.2017.10012377
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Antecedents of consumer environmental attitude and intention to purchase green products: moderating role of perceived product necessity

Abstract: IJETM is a refereed and authoritative source of information in

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…According to Miller (1990), consumers are willing to spend 5% more on a sustainable product than the normal price of the product, and a study by McNeill & Moore (2015) showed that the people they surveyed asserted that if they liked a certain piece of clothing, they would find a way to get it at whatever price it was, but some other studies did not show that this. Although consumers claim to care about the environment, they do not act realistically by buying eco-friendly products because the prices of these products are often higher than traditional products (Connell, 2010;Malik, Singhal & Tiwari, 2017). Other studies (Kilbourne & Beckmann, 1998;Ma et al, 2012;Hsu et al, 2017) showed similar results.…”
Section: Factors Affecting Sustainable Fashion Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…According to Miller (1990), consumers are willing to spend 5% more on a sustainable product than the normal price of the product, and a study by McNeill & Moore (2015) showed that the people they surveyed asserted that if they liked a certain piece of clothing, they would find a way to get it at whatever price it was, but some other studies did not show that this. Although consumers claim to care about the environment, they do not act realistically by buying eco-friendly products because the prices of these products are often higher than traditional products (Connell, 2010;Malik, Singhal & Tiwari, 2017). Other studies (Kilbourne & Beckmann, 1998;Ma et al, 2012;Hsu et al, 2017) showed similar results.…”
Section: Factors Affecting Sustainable Fashion Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 94%