Does the Netherlands-based consumer disidentification model work in the US?

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Does the Netherlands-based consumer disidentification model work in the US?
Abstract
Alexander Josiassen (2011) initiated research on the consumer disidentification (CDI) concept and its impact on product purchase behavior. In his investigation, a predictive model that included CDI as an exogeneous factor in domestic product preference was tested on adult second-generation immigrants who were born in, and lived in, the Netherlands. The model also incorporated consumer ethnocentrism (CET) as a second predictor variable. Josiassen's study showed that CDI negatively affected the purchase of products made domestically or by domestic firms. Conversely, CET was found to have a positive effect on the purchase of these products. Furthermore, relationships of CDI and CET to purchase intentions were independent of each other. In the Netherlands model, both variables were hypothesized to explain domestic product preference directly and indirectly through domestic product judgment. This paper replicates and assesses the generalizability of the CDI construct and model. Replication of the Netherland CDI model in the U.S. results in an acceptable measurement fit, but a slightly below acceptable structural fit. © 2020, University of South Australia. All rights reserved.
Publication
EMPGENS | Journal of Empirical Generalisations in Marketing Science
Date
2020
Volume
20
Issue
1
Pages
1–11
Journal Abbr
J. Empir. Gen. Mark. Sci.
Citation Key
princeDoesNetherlandsbasedConsumer2020
Accessed
8/27/20, 2:25 PM
ISSN
13264443
Language
English
Extra
tex.ids: princeDoesNetherlandsbasedConsumer2020a tex.citation: https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopusid/85091584869 type: Article
Citation
Prince, M., & Kwak, L. (2020). Does the Netherlands-based consumer disidentification model work in the US? EMPGENS | Journal of Empirical Generalisations in Marketing Science, 20(1), 1–11. https://www.empgens.com/