Sustainability and Consumers’ Willingness to Pay: Does Country-of-Origin Matter?

Author(s)
Maria Gabriela Montanari, Michela Matarazzo, Adamantios Diamantopoulos
Abstract

Despite the relevance of sustainability to consumers, companies and countries, empirical evidence on its interaction with country-of-origin (COO) is still limited, particularly considering consumers’ price responses. This paper examines the impact of sustainability labels and country-of-origin (COO) on consumers’ willingness to pay (WTP) for a brand. Based on two experimental studies with apparel as the focal product category (Study 1: T-shirts; Study 2: Sneakers), we find that differences in country image favorability do not always translate into significant differences in consumers’ WTP. While a positive effect of COO favorability on WTP is found in Study 1, this effect is not replicated in Study 2. However, in both studies, we observe that a sustainability label increases consumers’ WTP for the less favorable COO but does not affect consumers’ WTP for the more favorable COO. Implications for theory and practice are considered and suggestions for future research made.

Organisation(s)
Department of Marketing and International Business
External organisation(s)
Università degli Studi „Guglielmo Marconi“
Publication date
05-2023
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502052 Business administration, 502020 Market research
Keywords
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 12 - Responsible Consumption and Production
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/sustainability-and-consumers-willingness-to-pay-does-countryoforigin-matter(32fa10e9-a316-4608-af15-d1a97fd05c1b).html