Internet shopping in the Covid-19 era: Investigating the role of perceived risk, anxiety, gender, culture, and trust in the consumers? purchasing behavior from a developing country context
growth, particularly Internet-enabled technologies. It is a recognizable fact that the Internet shopping trend
sweeping developed countries and is still in its development stage in developing countries. Covid-19 pandemic
triggered a surge in online shopping, resulting in a massive acceleration in online businesses in both developed
and developing cultures. This study intends to study the adoption dynamics of Internet shopping during the
Covid-19 pandemic era. The current study recognizes that trust is a crucial prerequisite to effectively dampen the
noise associated with the uncertainty, insecurity, and ambiguous nature of Internet shopping technology.
Certainly, a perceivably trustworthy Internet shopping environment would position individuals in a less difficult
mandate to start transacting online. To achieve the goals of this study, the influence of perceived risk, Internet
shopping anxiety, gender on trust and intention, and the moderating impact of cultural differences on the trustintention
relationship. A questionnaire was developed utilizing validated measurement items taken from previous
research. A convenience sample was used to collect data through a self-administered questionnaire. The
empirical data which consists of 215 valid datasets were analyzed utilizing WarpPLS software. Perceived risk,
Internet shopping anxiety, and gender were found to exert empirical influence on trust and intention with the
exception of perceived risk which showed an insignificant correlation with behavioral intention. Cultural differences,
with exception of the masculinity-femininity dimension, negatively moderate the trust-intention relationship
as proposed in this study. Finally, theoretical contributions and practical implications are addressed.