2015
DOI: 10.1016/s2212-5671(15)01321-0
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Economics of Luxury: Counting Probability of Buying Counterfeits of Luxury Goods

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Cited by 7 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In addition, negative influence of the educational level was also revealed as minimal in both countries. Rod, Rais, Schwarz, and Čermáková (2015), who based their study on Engel Curve, presented similar results. They surveyed the effect of age, household income and education level of Czech Republic consumers on the intention to purchase counterfeit goods and found that age was negatively and household income was positively correlated.…”
Section: Consumer Trait Specific Motivationssupporting
confidence: 54%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In addition, negative influence of the educational level was also revealed as minimal in both countries. Rod, Rais, Schwarz, and Čermáková (2015), who based their study on Engel Curve, presented similar results. They surveyed the effect of age, household income and education level of Czech Republic consumers on the intention to purchase counterfeit goods and found that age was negatively and household income was positively correlated.…”
Section: Consumer Trait Specific Motivationssupporting
confidence: 54%
“…There are also controversy findings concerning the role of demographics (Bian et al, ; Norum & Cuno, ; Rod et al, ), fashion consciousness (Engizek & Şekerkaya, ; Türkyılmaz & Uslu, ), status consumption (Phau & Teah, ; Türkyılmaz & Uslu, ) and personal gratification (de Matos et al, ; Türkyılmaz & Uslu, ) on counterfeit consumption. Furthermore, as antecedents of counterfeit consumption, normative susceptibility, self‐ambiguity, social influence, perceived social value were investigated a little.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Studies show that there is a positive relationship between value consciousness and counterfeit consumption, (Ang et al , 2001; Randhawa et al , 2015; Penz and Stöttinger, 2012; Türkyılmaz and Uslu, 2014) and a negative association between the intensity of ethical value/morality and counterfeit consumption (Kozar and Marcketti, 2011; Kim et al , 2012; Chaudhry and Stumpf, 2011). Scholars also argue that integrity is negatively (Ang et al , 2001; Türkyılmaz and Uslu, 2014; de Matos et al , 2007; Phau and Teah, 2009), whereas materialism (Kozar and Marcketti, 2011; Türkyılmaz and Uslu, 2014) and the happiness dimension of materialism (Engizek and Şekerkaya, 2015) and subjective norms (Fernandes, 2013; de Matos et al , 2007) are positively correlated with counterfeit consumption (Fernandes, 2013; Penz and Stöttinger, 2012; Bian and Veloutsou, 2007; Rod et al , 2015).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The previous study explained that individual would be concerned with the quality of counterfeit goods when evaluating any product and this consideration has led to influence the purchasing behavior (Ian et al, 2009;Norum & Cuno, 2011;Chiu & Leng, 2015). Previous study indicated that there is a positive correlation between quality and intention to purchase Rod et al, 2015;Chiu & Leng, 2015). Nevertheless, the condition of this research does not support the Chiu and Leng (2015); Hashim et al (2018), while this study found that quality does not statistically influence the attitude.…”
Section: Relationship Between Quality and Intention To Purchasementioning
confidence: 53%
“…However counterfeit luxury goods have a various range of quality, low and high quality Chiu & Leng, 2015). Another researcher found that the quality of coun-terfeit goods are almost equal to the particular original goods quality (Rod et al, 2015). When the quality of counterfeit is sufficiently high it cannot be easily identified because its physical appearance and the similarity with the original luxury goods are alike, in other words for low quality it is visibly shown on the product itself and easy to identify.…”
Section: Relationship Between Quality and Intention To Purchasementioning
confidence: 99%