Household Stockpiling in Response to the Covid-19 Pandemic: Empirical Evidence from Vietnam

IF 0.6 Q4 ECONOMICS Forum for Social Economics Pub Date : 2021-03-26 DOI:10.1080/07360932.2021.1904431
Vu Hoang Nam, H. Luu, N. Anh, T. Nguyen, H. Doan
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract The current Covid-19 pandemic has caused hundreds of thousands of deaths globally. As a consequence, a myriad of concomitant economic and social activities has been frozen. Many countries have had to enforce border blockages, travel restrictions and quarantine. The pandemic has changed consumers’ attitudes significantly and driven individuals and households to the state of panic buying. This paper examines the household stockpiling in Vietnam in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. Self-administered questionnaires were used to collect the data across the country. The empirical results show that householders’ education and household sizes are positively associated with the propensity that a household stocks up. However, the likelihood of a family stockpiling is lowered when members receive information about the pandemic from formal sources. There are also notable differences among the essential items being stockpiled by different households. Specifically, households living in urban areas or near (super)markets are more inclined to stock up food than other goods. By contrast, households with members working as doctors tend to spend a large portion of their stockpiling budget on medication.
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应对Covid-19大流行的家庭储备:来自越南的经验证据
当前新冠肺炎大流行已在全球造成数十万人死亡。结果,伴随而来的无数经济和社会活动被冻结。许多国家不得不实施边境封锁、旅行限制和隔离。大流行极大地改变了消费者的态度,使个人和家庭陷入恐慌性购买的状态。本文考察了越南为应对Covid-19大流行而进行的家庭储备。在全国范围内使用自我管理的问卷来收集数据。实证结果表明,户主的受教育程度和家庭规模与家庭存量倾向呈正相关。然而,当成员从正式来源获得有关大流行的信息时,家庭储备的可能性就会降低。不同家庭的必需品储备也存在显著差异。具体来说,生活在城市地区或超市附近的家庭更倾向于囤积食品,而不是其他商品。相比之下,有医生成员的家庭往往会把很大一部分储备预算花在药品上。
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CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
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