This study analyzes the determinants of impulsive buying behavior in low-cost retail stores in Metropolitan Lima, with particular emphasis on psychological, economic, social, and personal factors. The research draws on survey data collected from 380 consumers aged 18 to 39 belonging to socioeconomic levels B and C who had made recent purchases in discount stores. Data were gathered through a structured and validated instrument and examined using ordinal logistic regression and multinomial discrete choice models. The dependent variable, impulsive buying, was measured through three dimensions—remembered, suggested, and pure—while explanatory variables were classified into low, medium, and high categories. The empirical results demonstrate that psychological and economic dimensions exert a strong and positive influence on impulsive consumption, whereas social factors show no significant effect. Personal factors, though less consistent, also reveal a positive role. Diagnostic tests, including robustness checks, confirm the stability of the estimations. Beyond its marketing relevance, the findings contribute to the sustainability debate by highlighting how understanding impulsive behavior can guide the design of retail strategies that foster responsible consumption, reduce the risks of over-spending in vulnerable households, and support inclusive and resilient consumption practices. Thus, the study links the analysis of changing consumption patterns with broader sustainability goals in emerging urban contexts.
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Luis Eduardo García-Calderón
Augusto Aliaga-Miranda
Esther Rosa Saenz Arenas
Sustainability
Universidad Científica del Sur
Peruvian University of Applied Sciences
Private University of the North
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García-Calderón et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68d469ce31b076d99fa66b11 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188395