“Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength

This paper seeks to examine the effect of ethnic identification strength between the Malays and Chinese towards purchasing “Made in China” products. A quantitative approach by means of self-administered questionnaire was adopted. 252 Malay and 251 Chinese respondents’ data were collected from loca...

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Main Authors: Huat, Wei Huang, Ernest Cyril, de Run, Hiram, Ting, Huong Sung, Colin Ting
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EconJournals 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13556/1/Huat%20Wei.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13556/
http: www.econjournals.com
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spelling my.unimas.ir.135562022-02-04T08:11:45Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13556/ “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength Huat, Wei Huang Ernest Cyril, de Run Hiram, Ting Huong Sung, Colin Ting HF Commerce This paper seeks to examine the effect of ethnic identification strength between the Malays and Chinese towards purchasing “Made in China” products. A quantitative approach by means of self-administered questionnaire was adopted. 252 Malay and 251 Chinese respondents’ data were collected from local institutions of higher learning. Independent sample t-tests and multiple regression analysis were used to look into difference and relationship pertaining to country of origin (COO) image, product knowledge, product involvement, information search and purchase intention. The findings show Malays and Chinese are different in terms of their perceptions towards COO image and product involvement. Moreover, COO image is found to be significantly different among Malays and Chinese with strong and weak ethnic identification. However, COO image is found to have no effect on information search and purchase intention although both ethnic groups are generally in favor of products “Made in China.” Instead product knowledge and involvement are found to be essential. This study suggests that marketers and managers need to understand what is shared and what is not among Malays and Chinese in a developing and diverse society like Malaysia. Despite the effect of COO image and ethnic identification strength, product knowledge and involvement play pivotal role in understanding consumers today. EconJournals 2016 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13556/1/Huat%20Wei.pdf Huat, Wei Huang and Ernest Cyril, de Run and Hiram, Ting and Huong Sung, Colin Ting (2016) “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength. International Review of Management and Marketing, 6 (3). pp. 631-640. ISSN 21464405 http: www.econjournals.com
institution Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
building Centre for Academic Information Services (CAIS)
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sarawak
content_source UNIMAS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.unimas.my/
language English
topic HF Commerce
spellingShingle HF Commerce
Huat, Wei Huang
Ernest Cyril, de Run
Hiram, Ting
Huong Sung, Colin Ting
“Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength
description This paper seeks to examine the effect of ethnic identification strength between the Malays and Chinese towards purchasing “Made in China” products. A quantitative approach by means of self-administered questionnaire was adopted. 252 Malay and 251 Chinese respondents’ data were collected from local institutions of higher learning. Independent sample t-tests and multiple regression analysis were used to look into difference and relationship pertaining to country of origin (COO) image, product knowledge, product involvement, information search and purchase intention. The findings show Malays and Chinese are different in terms of their perceptions towards COO image and product involvement. Moreover, COO image is found to be significantly different among Malays and Chinese with strong and weak ethnic identification. However, COO image is found to have no effect on information search and purchase intention although both ethnic groups are generally in favor of products “Made in China.” Instead product knowledge and involvement are found to be essential. This study suggests that marketers and managers need to understand what is shared and what is not among Malays and Chinese in a developing and diverse society like Malaysia. Despite the effect of COO image and ethnic identification strength, product knowledge and involvement play pivotal role in understanding consumers today.
format Article
author Huat, Wei Huang
Ernest Cyril, de Run
Hiram, Ting
Huong Sung, Colin Ting
author_facet Huat, Wei Huang
Ernest Cyril, de Run
Hiram, Ting
Huong Sung, Colin Ting
author_sort Huat, Wei Huang
title “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength
title_short “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength
title_full “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength
title_fullStr “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength
title_full_unstemmed “Made In China” Products and the Implication of Ethnic Identification strength
title_sort “made in china” products and the implication of ethnic identification strength
publisher EconJournals
publishDate 2016
url http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13556/1/Huat%20Wei.pdf
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/13556/
http: www.econjournals.com
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score 13.209306