Religiosity, Divine Control and Consumer Resilience during the Covid-19 Pandemic

Anthony Grimes*, Stuart Roper, Daniel Hampson

*Corresponding author for this work

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    Abstract

    By way of a cross-sectional survey (n = 524), this study demonstrates that religiosity positively influenced consumers’ willingness to use face-to-face services under very different, disruptive, and risky conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Moderated mediation analysis shows this relationship was mediated by beliefs in divine control and moderated by ethnicity. The findings establish intrinsic religiosity as a key predictor of adaptive consumer behaviour that was critical to promoting much-needed socio-economic support during the ongoing disruption of the pandemic. They provide an explanation at the individual level, grounded in concepts of consumer resilience, of why religiosity has previously been linked to socio-economic recovery following the pandemic, and reveal the important influence of intrinsic religiosity on consumer adaptation and behaviour during times of major socio-economic disruption.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1229-1258
    Number of pages30
    JournalJournal of Marketing Management
    Volume41
    Issue number11-12
    Early online date11 Aug 2025
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2025

    Keywords

    • Consumer Resilience
    • Religiosity
    • Divine control
    • Ethnic minorities
    • Service consumption
    • COVID-19
    • service consumption
    • divine control
    • Consumer resilience
    • ethnic minorities

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