Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs

In the past decade, there has been an increased awareness of consumer unethical behaviour in Asian countries, because Asian consumers are supposed to be more engaged in the production of counterfeit products and using computer software without paying than Western consumers (Chan et al., 1998). How d...

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Main Author: YUAN, RUIZHI
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25066/
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author YUAN, RUIZHI
author_facet YUAN, RUIZHI
author_sort YUAN, RUIZHI
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In the past decade, there has been an increased awareness of consumer unethical behaviour in Asian countries, because Asian consumers are supposed to be more engaged in the production of counterfeit products and using computer software without paying than Western consumers (Chan et al., 1998). How do they judge the ethically questionable behaviours? What factors affecting their ethical beliefs? These questions are important for companies wishing to reduce consumer unethical behaviours. They are also important to the government who want to improve business environment and ensure ethical trade and also protect intellectual property rights. For modern enterprises, it is extremely critical to investigate whether consumers’ attitudes towards businesses influence their ethical beliefs. This study explores the linear logic between consumers’ attitudes towards businesses and consumer ethical beliefs in a Chinese context. The present study uses a consumer ethics scale introduced by Muncy & Vitell (1992) to determine consumers’ ethical beliefs through 116 valid questionnaires. The factor analysis results show that the dimensions of consumer ethics scale for Chinese consumers are somewhat similar compared with western consumers. Among four dimensions of consumer ethics scale, Chinese consumers are more acceptable to ‘actively benefiting from questionable actions’ while perceive ‘actively benefiting from illegal activities’ as most unacceptable. Moreover, consumers’ attitudes towards businesses do have significant positive relationships with both ‘passively benefiting at the expense of others’ and ‘no harm/no foul’ ethical dimensions. Thus, it is imperative for Chinese companies and government to promote consumer education and develop better customer-business relationship in order to change consumers’ ethical beliefs, leading to and hence reducing unethical consumer behaviour. Key words: consumer ethical beliefs, consumers’ attitudes towards businesses, consumer unethical behaviours.
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spelling nottingham-250662022-03-21T16:09:41Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25066/ Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs YUAN, RUIZHI In the past decade, there has been an increased awareness of consumer unethical behaviour in Asian countries, because Asian consumers are supposed to be more engaged in the production of counterfeit products and using computer software without paying than Western consumers (Chan et al., 1998). How do they judge the ethically questionable behaviours? What factors affecting their ethical beliefs? These questions are important for companies wishing to reduce consumer unethical behaviours. They are also important to the government who want to improve business environment and ensure ethical trade and also protect intellectual property rights. For modern enterprises, it is extremely critical to investigate whether consumers’ attitudes towards businesses influence their ethical beliefs. This study explores the linear logic between consumers’ attitudes towards businesses and consumer ethical beliefs in a Chinese context. The present study uses a consumer ethics scale introduced by Muncy & Vitell (1992) to determine consumers’ ethical beliefs through 116 valid questionnaires. The factor analysis results show that the dimensions of consumer ethics scale for Chinese consumers are somewhat similar compared with western consumers. Among four dimensions of consumer ethics scale, Chinese consumers are more acceptable to ‘actively benefiting from questionable actions’ while perceive ‘actively benefiting from illegal activities’ as most unacceptable. Moreover, consumers’ attitudes towards businesses do have significant positive relationships with both ‘passively benefiting at the expense of others’ and ‘no harm/no foul’ ethical dimensions. Thus, it is imperative for Chinese companies and government to promote consumer education and develop better customer-business relationship in order to change consumers’ ethical beliefs, leading to and hence reducing unethical consumer behaviour. Key words: consumer ethical beliefs, consumers’ attitudes towards businesses, consumer unethical behaviours. 2011-12 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25066/1/Ruizhi_YUAN_marketing_dissertation.pdf YUAN, RUIZHI (2011) Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished)
spellingShingle YUAN, RUIZHI
Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs
title Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs
title_full Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs
title_fullStr Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs
title_full_unstemmed Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs
title_short Chinese Consumers’ Ethical Beliefs: An Investigation Into Chinese Consumers’ Attitudes Towards Businesses Affecting Their Ethical Beliefs
title_sort chinese consumers’ ethical beliefs: an investigation into chinese consumers’ attitudes towards businesses affecting their ethical beliefs
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/25066/