UNDERSTANDING GREEN CONSUMPTION INTENTION AND BEHAVIOR THROUGH MULTIDIMENSIONAL ATTITUDES AND SUBJECTIVE NORMS: EVIDENCE FROM BANGLADESH’S ORGANIC COSMETICS MARKET

Thumbnail Image

Date

29-Jun-2025

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Comilla University

Abstract

This study investigates the psychological and social determinants of green consumption
behavior in Bangladesh’s organic cosmetics market by extending the Theory of Planned
Behavior (TPB). Using a structured questionnaire, data were collected from 201 urban
consumers and analyzed using SPSS. The study finds that attitudes toward the environment, green consumption, and organic cosmetics, along with subjective norms, significantly and positively influence green consumption intention. In turn, intention strongly predicts actual green consumption behavior, explaining 43.4% of its variance. These results confirm the mediating role of intention and highlight the effectiveness of multidimensional attitudes in predicting sustainable consumer actions. The findings contribute to bridging the attitude–behavior gap and offer practical implications for marketers and policymakers aiming to promote environmentally responsible consumption in emerging markets like Bangladesh.

Description

Keywords

Green marketing—Bangladesh, Consumer behavior—Bangladesh, Organic cosmetics industry—Bangladesh, Sustainable consumption—Bangladesh, Environmental psychology—Bangladesh

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By