The Psychological Impact of COVID-19 on Consumer Behaviour:

Authors

  • Yiran Sun Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61173/esr37j10

Keywords:

COVID-19, consumer behaviour, risk aversion, social comparison, post-pandemic transformation

Abstract

The psychological factors influencing consumer behaviour have shifted due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Before the pandemic, consumption was mainly driven by individual cognition and social comparison. The pandemic acted as a psychological shock, leading to an increased need to address immediate concerns such as prolonged uncertainty, risk aversion, and non-essential impulse purchases, raising questions about whether these changes in consumer psychology are temporary or have lasting effects. This essay offers a comparative and analytical perspective, discussing psychological theories like social comparison and risk perception alongside observable behavioural shifts from the pre-pandemic to post-pandemic periods. It highlights the disruptive psychological impacts of the crisis and identifies post-pandemic factors that have long-term influences, which also have macro-level implications. The analysis indicates that the situation has caused a significant shift in consumers’ priorities during the post-pandemic era. Social drivers, present before the pandemic, were replaced by increased risk aversion and emotion-driven spending during the crisis. In the post-pandemic period, these effects have become enduring, including a shift in values towards health, sustainability, and meaningful experiences such as wellness tourism and family-oriented activities. The study suggests that these psychological changes reflect a macrolevel transformation, with consumption moving away from materialism and instead are using consumption as a way to find security and personal fulfilment. This highlights the importance of exploring how these changes might influence the future of consumer markets.

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Published

2025-12-19

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Section

Articles