Confessions of a Green Consumer: Exploring Religiosity, Virtue Signaling, and Sustainable Choices
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
This study explores how intrinsic and extrinsic religiosity influence green purchase intentions, with conspicuous virtue signaling (CVS) as a mediator. Surveying 206 young Ghanaian students and professionals, the findings show intrinsic religiosity directly boosts eco-friendly buying, while extrinsic religiosity enhances green behavior indirectly via increased CVS. Both religiosity types unexpectedly raise self- and other-oriented virtue signaling, which in turn impact green choices; revealing that even socially motivated religious individuals can support sustainability. These results suggest green marketing can successfully appeal to both moral convictions and social recognition, offering a new perspective on how faith-based and status-driven motivations together shape environmentally responsible consumption.