Shop early, shop often to avoid Christmas impulse
buying: study
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[December 16, 2017]
By Jon Herskovitz
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Parceling out
holiday shopping in small amounts and completing it in a realistic
schedule helps people maintain the self-control needed to avoid being
swept away in impulse purchases that can wreck budgets, a study to be
published in January said.
The study from Texas A&M University researchers looked at how well
people complied with maintaining self-control for tasks such as making
purchases and found that people should pace themselves if they want to
accomplish larger goals.
"Try to conserve your energy. Don't try to make it too hard on yourself
because it is going to backfire," said Marco Palma, director of the
Human Behavior Laboratory at Texas A&M and co-author of the study called
"Self-control: Knowledge or perishable resource?" It will be published
in the Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization.
Palma recommended making a list and dividing it into sub-goals of small
purchases. Shopping online and shopping early in the day can help
conserve energy, which can also help people exercise self-control.
"Committing to a shopping list will help you stay on budget," he said in
an interview this week.
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An employee checks on a Christmas display at a Walmart store in
Chicago, Illinois, U.S., November 23, 2016. REUTERS/Kamil
Krzaczynski/File Photo
The worst shopping scenario in terms of self-control is waiting until the last
minute to make the bulk of holiday purchases, he said.
The study used biometric data including eye tracking and brain scanning to
measure how well people complied with easy and difficult tasks that required
self-control.
It found that an initial moderate self-control act enhances subsequent
self-control ability by increasing confidence and motivation, but exerting too
much self-control drains subsequent self-control ability.
But humans are humans and even when they are nice, they can be a little bit
naughty. A person who completes a holiday shopping list as planned may splurge
with a little reward for themselves, Palma said.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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