
The Impact of Determinants on Green Consumption Behavior for Green Design Displays
Author(s) -
ChinHung Liu,
Jui-Lung Chen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of business and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1833-8119
pISSN - 1833-3850
DOI - 10.5539/ijbm.v16n8p55
Subject(s) - conformity , theory of planned behavior , green consumption , normative social influence , normative , consumption (sociology) , psychology , government (linguistics) , sustainable consumption , social psychology , marketing , control (management) , business , economics , political science , sociology , microeconomics , social science , linguistics , philosophy , management , production (economics) , law
We conducted a consumer survey and used SPSS to examine the effects among technology acceptance model, theory of planned behavior, conformity and government low-carbon policies. The results of this study show that: 1. perceived usefulness and perceived ease-of-use have a significant and positive impact on green behavior attitude; green behavior attitude, green perceived behavior control, green subjective norms, and government low-carbon policies all have a significant and positive impact on green behavioral intention, and green behavioral intention also has a significant and positive impact on green consumption behavior. 2. The normative and informational influences in conformity both have a significant and positive impact on green subjective norms, with normative influence exerting a greater impact. 3. On average, female consumers expressed a significantly higher agreement than male consumers with regard to the technology acceptance model, the theory of planned behavior, and conformity, and married consumers expressed a higher agreement than single and divorced consumers with regard to the technology acceptance model. The above results could provide companies with reference for development and business strategies involving sustainable displays.