Journal of Scientific Papers

ECONOMICS & SOCIOLOGY


© CSR, 2008-2019
ISSN 2071-789X

3.1
2019CiteScore
 
91th percentile
Powered by  Scopus



Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)


Strike Plagiarism

Partners
  • General Founder and Publisher:

     
    Centre of Sociological Research

     

  • Publishing Partners:

    University of Szczecin (Poland)

    Széchenyi István University, (Hungary)

    Mykolas Romeris University (Lithuania)

    Alexander Dubcek University of Trencín (Slovak Republic)


  • Membership:


    American Sociological Association


    European Sociological Association


    World Economics Association (WEA)

     


    CrossRef

     


Grocery shopping behaviour in the era of COVID-19: Panel data analysis from convenience store sector in England, Scotland and Wales

Vol. 16, No 2, 2023

Maria Rybaczewska

 

Jagiellonian University,

Kraków, Poland

University of Stirling, 

Stirling, the United Kingdom

E-mail: maria.rybaczewska@uj.edu.pl

ORCID 0000-0002-0098-1991

 

Grocery shopping behaviour in the era of COVID-19: Panel data analysis from convenience store sector in England, Scotland and Wales

 

Aneta Maria Kłopocka

 

University of Economics and Human Sciences in Warsaw,

Warsaw, Poland

E-mail: a.klopocka@vizja.pl

ORCID 0000-0002-7940-5910


Tomasz Kuszewski

 

University of Economics and Human Sciences in Warsaw,

Warsaw, Poland

E-mail: t.kuszewski@vizja.pl

ORCID 0000-0001-7334-3926


Łukasz Sułkowski

 

WSB University,

Dąbrowa Górnicza, Poland

E-mail: lsulkowski@wsb.edu.pl

ORCID 0000-0002-1248-2743

 


 

Abstract. To the best of our knowledge this is the first attempt to address the consistencies and inconsistencies between the grocery shopping behaviour shifts in the era of Covid-19 across three devolved nations of the mainland UK. We address the strictness of ‘lockdown style’ closure and containment policies that primarily restrict people’s behaviour (stringency index). We use a unique dataset of transactional data (778,305 observations) drawn from 1,282 convenience stores located in England, Scotland and Wales. Panel data analysis covers the pre-pandemic (Jan 2018 – Feb 2020) and pandemic period (March 2020 – Dec 2020). This research reveals that, despite the consistent decrease of single item transactions and increase of average spend per transaction across England, Scotland and Wales, the dynamics of these shifts in time varies meaningfully. All these shifts highly correlate with the stringency index. Analysis of additional explanatory variables i.e. store size, location, affiliation shows further dimensions.

 

Received: March, 2022

1st Revision: April, 2023

Accepted: June, 2023

 

DOI: 10.14254/2071-789X.2023/16-2/13

JEL ClassificationD12, D91, M31, M30

Keywords: grocery shopping, Covid-19 pandemic, consumers’ purchase behaviour, England, Scotland, Wales