scholarly journals FACTORS AFFECTING ONLINE SHOPPING BEHAVIOR OF INTERNATIONAL COLLEGE STUDENTS IN CHINA

2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Musrat Siyal ◽  
Saeed Siyal ◽  
Jun Wu ◽  
Debajyoti Pal ◽  
Muhammad Mujahid Memon

Online shopping is an emerging trend throughout the world. Likewise, it is used in China among Chinese consumers, but not all foreigners use it frequently due to several factors. This study discussed those factors which cause hindrance for foreigners to use online shopping and their behavior towards it. To do so, the authors have proposed the model by extending the technology acceptance model (TAM). The data were collected from the international students in China through a survey questionnaire and analyzed by SPSS to draw the results of the proposed relationships. The findings show that the online shopping behavior of international students in China is negatively related to financial risk and positively related to trust and ease of use. Moreover, purchase intention mediates these relationships. The results will be useful for consumers and online sellers to retain existing consumers and attract more foreigners studying in China. Moreover, the paper mentioned the implications and future directions of the study.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 45-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pingjun Jiang ◽  
David B. Jones

Few studies in the literature on electronic commerce provide empirical investigation of consumer behavior in the international online shopping context. This study identifies and discusses factors that influence international online purchases and profile the characteristics of those who purchase and those who do not purchase from online stores overseas in three main categories: the online shopping experiential factors, the international shopping motivational factors, and the international trust attitudinal factors. The international online shoppers tend to highly trust foreign vendors and have high preference of and confidence in online shopping. More importantly, these shoppers are knowledge of shopping sites' hosting countries and strongly believe in those sites' global propensity. The paper makes contributions towards new knowledge and understanding of how international online shoppers differ from non-shoppers.


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