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Common and Contradictory Motivations in Buying Intentions for Green and Luxury Automobiles

Author

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  • Farhad Aliyev

    (International Direct Marketing, DMCC-Dialog Marketing Competence Center, University of Kassel, Mönchebergstraße 1, 34125 Kassel, Germany)

  • Ralf Wagner

    (International Direct Marketing, DMCC-Dialog Marketing Competence Center, University of Kassel, Mönchebergstraße 1, 34125 Kassel, Germany)

  • Stefan Seuring

    (Supply Chain Management Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Kassel, Mönchebergstraße 1, 34125 Kassel, Germany)

Abstract

Luxury is often blamed for creating social inequality and hampering sustainability, especially in the social and environmental realms. For instance, luxury goods entice people to conspicuous consumption that may result in showing off. However, study results show that luxury and environmental sustainability have common features. Notably, previous research mainly examined motivations for green purchases in general without relating to the specific product categories such as durables. Therefore, this study examines the relationship between these two—green and luxury automobile buying intentions—by analyzing the survey results of 1601 respondents relating to more than 60 nationalities. In contrast to a substantial effect on luxury buying intentions, perceived conspicuousness has no significant positive effect on green auto purchase intentions, and that price value has a limited influence compared with the effect on luxury automobile purchase intentions. Furthermore, hedonism has a less positive impact on green auto purchase intentions compared to its impact on luxury automobile buying intentions. The ‘extended self’ and the perception of high quality have been found to be drivers of luxury and green automobile purchase intentions, while unique value appears to have no impact on purchase intentions for green and conventional luxury automobiles. The present study contributes to the extant research by investigating common and contradictory motivations for luxury and green buying intentions of automobiles. Furthermore, it suggests a reconsideration of the traditional view that luxury and environmental consumption are inconsistent and contradictory concepts. The complementary managerial implications of this study guide practitioners in positioning the situatable variants of their automobiles as ethical luxury.

Suggested Citation

  • Farhad Aliyev & Ralf Wagner & Stefan Seuring, 2019. "Common and Contradictory Motivations in Buying Intentions for Green and Luxury Automobiles," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 11(12), pages 1-15, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:11:y:2019:i:12:p:3268-:d:239479
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Luming Zhao & Jiaxi Peng & Shubin Yu, 2023. "Sustainable Luxury and Consumer Purchase Intention: A Systematic Literature Review," SAGE Open, , vol. 13(4), pages 21582440231, December.
    2. Jiajia Chen & Jingke Gao & Ziyuan Liu & Yang Luo & Mengge Chen & Lingxue Bu, 2022. "Luxury in Emerging Markets: An Investigation of the Role of Subjective Social Class and Conspicuous Consumption," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(4), pages 1-16, February.
    3. Malek Simon Grimm & Ralf Wagner, 2024. "Challenging the linearity assumption of intra-brand image confusion," Journal of Marketing Analytics, Palgrave Macmillan, vol. 12(2), pages 355-374, June.

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