Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to propose a framework to distinguish between various types of antecedents and consequences of impulse buying. The authors tested it using a meta-analytical approach.Design/methodology/approachThe authors examined 12 databases and analyzed 178 relationships in 100 articles. For the quantitative data analysis, the authors used the coefficient of correlationras a metric to measure the effect size of the studied scope variables.FindingsThe findings of this meta-analysis demonstrated significant relation of antecedents and consequences of the impulse buying behavior, such as consumer impulsiveness (r= 0.464), materialistic consumption (r= 0.344), purchase pleasure (r= 0.270), hedonic value (r= 0.311), income (r= 0.703), gender (r= 0.150), age (r= −0.062), store atmosphere (r= 0.166), decision-making (r= 0.703) and positive emotions (r= 0.323).Research limitations/implicationsThis meta-analysis reviewed relationships found worldwide in the literature, expanding and improving the current knowledge. The meta-analysis identified ways that research on impulse buying is lacking and presented suggestions for the elaboration of new studies to allow future researchers to better define their agendas.Practical implicationsThis meta-analysis brings important questions, such as impulse buying behavior is associated not only with consumer impulsiveness but also with materialistic consumption.Originality/valueThis research tested the impact of the antecedents and consequences of impulse buying and presented important results through this meta-analytical review. This meta-analysis contributes to the marketing literature, with a set of empirical generalizations, including relationship coefficients and calculated fail-safe numbers.
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