Published In

Psychology & Marketing

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-1-2025

Subjects

Consumer spending

Abstract

Consumers today are anxious. How does this anxiety influence how they spend their time and money? Five experiments demonstrate that when consumers feel anxious because they are making insufficient progress toward a goal, they attempt to use their resources more efficiently while making decisions unrelated to the goal. This desire to be efficient makes them more likely to (a) choose jobs that offer higher payout rates rather than a higher total payout, (b) perform tasks simultaneously rather than sequentially (i.e., multitask), and (c) select products and activities that cost less money and time than usual (i.e., price and time discounts). However, anxiety increases efficiency‐seeking only when consumers are anxious about slow goal progress, rather than when they are anxious about threats outside their control (terrorism, disease, climate change, etc.) or when they feel that time is scarce, but they are not behind on their goal. Furthermore, the desire to be efficient occurs only when consumers feel anxious, not merely when they fall behind on a goal but do not feel anxious.

Rights

Copyright (c) 2025 The Authors

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Locate the Document

https://doi.org/10.1002/mar.22236

DOI

10.1002/mar.22236

Persistent Identifier

https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/43721

Publisher

Wiley

Included in

Business Commons

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