ONLINE SHOPPING BANGLADESH

online shopping bangladesh

online shopping bangladesh

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Compared to the Western world, online shopping penetration in Bangladesh is relatively low – a mere 3% of people do online shopping there. However, the country encountered a surge in online buying propensity in 2020 due to COVID-19-related lockdown measures. Online shopping increased in the country by 70 % in 2020 compared to last year. It is forecasted that business-to-customer e-commerce will double by 2026. 50 % of the expanding e-commerce consumers reside in the capital, Dhaka. This study aims to characterize the growing number of online shoppers and capture the heterogeneous impact of online shopping on physical shopping frequency. The study uses data from a survey conducted during the last two months of 2021. Responses from 308 individuals were used to develop a binary logit model to capture the heterogeneity among online shoppers.



Additionally, a generalized ordered logit model was developed to capture the heterogeneous change in the physical shopping frequency due to online shopping participation. The study identified exciting gender differences. In Dhaka, females are more likely to shop online than males. Moreover, for females, online shopping is a substitute for physical buying, i.e., female online buyers are almost 50 % more likely to reduce their physical shopping frequency than males. On the other hand, car owners are more likely to engage in online shopping in the city, and when they do, their physical shopping frequency is more likely to be reduced than non-car owners. The latter result indicates that the diffusion of innovation hypothesis is more likely to be at play in Dhaka. Online Shopping Bangladesh





The study conducts a survey based on a structured questionnaire to collect information about the demography, physical and online shopping behavior, and online shopping attitude of the people residing in Dhaka – the capital city of Bangladesh. Next, the paper conducts Online Shopping Bangladesh using binary logit, integrated choice, and Online Shopping Bangladesh  (with generalized ordered logit kernel) frameworks to understand the heterogeneity of online shoppers and the impact of online shopping on physical shopping behavior.

The rest of the paper is organized as follows. The next section reviews the literature on online shopping adopters and their impact on physical shopping engagement. Section 3 presents the data and methodology. Section 4 presents the findings from the case study. Section 5 concludes the paper Online Shopping Bangladesh

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