The new middle class in emerging markets: How values and demographics influence discretionary consumption

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Date

2019

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Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

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Organizational Unit
Business
(2002)
We are a department that has been active for 22 years with the goal to determine the structural changes in economy and the problems of general business administration, to develop problem solving skills and to devise modelling techniques that fit our aims. Among our cornerstones are to graduate more students into administrative positions of our institutions, to help them realize their inner potential to be go-getters, to prepare them for the entrance exams for high-tier, well-respected public positions, and to help them participate graduate and doctorate degree programs at ease, nationally or internationally. In this regard, our course curriculum is constantly subject to updates. In addition, we do all in our power to graduate students that stand out, with double-major program opportunities. We make an effort to aid our students in kick-starting their professional life after completing a period of one semester at Private - Public institutions within the framework of our Cooperative Education Program.

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Abstract

The rise of new middle-class consumers in rapidly transforming emerging markets has attracted the attention of Western business executives. What they know about this growing segment of customers will determine whether they succeed or fail in these markets. The present study examines the factors that drive the discretionary consumption of this new middle class, including the effects of consumerist values, religious values, occupation, education levels, and ownership of fixed assets. The study draws its insights from data gathered from 391 new middle-class consumers in Ankara, the second-largest city in Turkey. The findings provide important implications for businesses, both indigenous and foreign. An overall implication is that managers ought to understand and qualify the new middle class in emerging markets not simply by their access to disposable income but by deeper attitudinal and behavioral characteristics.

Description

UNER, MEHMET MITHAT/0000-0002-1802-2553; Güngördü Belbağ, Aybegüm/0000-0001-8704-0045; Cavusgil, S. Tamer/0000-0003-1947-492X

Keywords

consumerist values, emerging markets, Iceberg Model, new middle class, religious values, Turkey

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Fields of Science

Citation

9

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Q2

Source

Volume

61

Issue

2

Start Page

325

End Page

337

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