Abstract
Female-headed single parent families are the fastest growing family type in the United States. Using a mail-out survey this study tests several hypotheses that differences exist between this family type and two parent families on grocery shopping attitudes and behaviors. Single mothers and married mothers hold similar attitudes toward grocery shopping. It is the behavior of the children and the interaction of the parent with the children that represents the major source of difference between the two family types. Family shopping is three times as common for single parent families, and children of single parents shop alone for the family at three times the rate of children raised in dual parent households. Potential marketing implications are discussed.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Roshan D. Ahuja
Roshan D. Ahuja (D.B.A., Mississippi State University) is an associate professor of marketing and a D.J. Q’Conor Research Fellow at Xavier University. His research has been published in the Journal of Consumer Marketing, Journal of Food Products Marketing, and in Advances in Consumer Research.
Louis M. Capella
Louis M. Capella (D.B.A., University of Kentucky) is a professor of marketing at Mississippi State University. He has bbeen published in a number of journals including Psychology and Marketing, Journal of Services Marketing, Journal of the Academy of Marketing Sciences, and Decision Sciences.
Ronald D. Taylor
Ronald D. Talyor (Ph.D., University of North Texas) is a professor of marketing at Mississippi State University. His most recent publications have appeared in Industrial Marketing Management and Journal of Advertising Research.