Recent literature demonstrates that consumers hold an implicit association that sustainable products have lower quality than conventional ones (Luchs et al. 2010; Mai et al. 2017). This research contributes to literature on sustainable consumption by exploring the impact of the use of recycled materials in the fashion industry. Fashion is tied to a human necessity to express both individuality and belongingness (Berger and Heath 2016). Hence, clothing assumes a role of signification through which the consumption of symbolic meanings helps individuals to construct their identity (Firat and Venkatesh 1995). Considering the role of fashion consumption on self-identity, we propose that the moral value of sustainability will uplift product evaluation, increasing quality perceptions and purchase intention. We propose that this positive sustainability-quality association will hold in private consumption contexts when consumption is motivated by the personal identity but not the social identity. In other words, consumers may attribute a higher quality to recycled products to mask the expected spillover of symbolic meanings on self-identity. Therefore, we propose that the positive sustainability-quality reasoning will be stronger when consumers are more prone to use the rational decision-making path to justify their decisions over more sustainable choices (i.e., private consumption). Two studies show the positive sustainability-quality association in fashion consumption. Study 1 demonstrates that participants (n = 97, Mage = 37.1, 51.5% females) inferred a marginally higher quality when a sneaker was made of recycled materials (Mrecycled = 5.32, Mcontrol = 4.99, F(1,95) = 2.84, p .05). In the private context, participants attributed higher quality (Mrecycled = 5.0, Mcontrol = 4.3, F(1,142) = 6.91, p
CITATION STYLE
Jochims, B., Yamim, A. P., & Rossi, P. (2018). All by Myself! The Sustainable Liability on Responsible Fashion: An Abstract. In Developments in Marketing Science: Proceedings of the Academy of Marketing Science (pp. 27–28). Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99181-8_10
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