The term
conspicuous consumption denotes the act of buying something, especially something expensive, that is not necessary to one's life, in a noticeable way. Scholar Andrew Trigg (2001) defined
conspicuous consumption as behaviour by which one can display great wealth, by means of idleness—expending much time in the practice of leisure activities, and spending much money to consume
luxury goods and services.
Conspicuous compassion, the practice of publicly donating large sums of money to
charity to enhance the
social prestige of the donor, is sometimes described as a type of conspicuous consumption. Possible motivations for conspicuous consumption include: •
Demonstration/
bandwagon effect — In the book
Income, Saving and the Theory of Consumer Behavior (1949),
James Duesenberry proposed that a person's conspicuous consumption psychologically depends not only upon the actual level of spending, but also upon the degree of his or her spending, as compared with the spending of other people. Thus the conspicuous consumer is motivated by the importance, to him or to her, of the opinion of the social and economic reference groups for whom are performed the patterns of conspicuous consumption. • Aggressive ostentation — In a 2006
CBSNews.com article,
Dick Meyer said that conspicuous consumption is a form of anger towards society, an "aggressive ostentation" that is an
antisocial behaviour, which arose from the
social alienation suffered by men, women, and families who feel they have become
anonymous in and to their societies. This feeling of alienation is aggravated by the decay of the
communitarian ethic essential to a person feeling him or herself part of the whole society. • Shelter and transport — In the United States, the trend towards building houses that were larger than needed by a
nuclear family began in the 1950s. Decades later, in the year 2000, that practice of conspicuous consumption resulted in people buying houses that were double the average size needed to comfortably house a nuclear family. Negative consequences of either buying or building an oversized house might include: • the loss of or reduction in the family's domestic recreational space—the backyard and the front yard; • the spending of old-age retirement funds to pay for a too-big house; • over-long
commuting time, from house to job, and vice versa, because the required plot of land was unavailable near a city. Oversized houses facilitated other forms of conspicuous consumption, such as an oversized garage for the family's oversized motor vehicles or buying more clothing to fill larger clothes closets. Conspicuous consumption becomes a self-generating cycle of spending money for the sake of social prestige. Analogous to the consumer trend for oversized houses is the trend towards buying oversized
light trucks, specifically the off-road
sport utility vehicle type (cf.
station wagon/
estate car), as a form of psychologically comforting conspicuous consumption, because such large vehicles usually are bought by city-dwellers, an urban nuclear family. Moreover, A. O'Cass and H. Frost (2002) claim that sociologists often incorrectly used the two terms as interchangeable and equivalent terms. In a later study, O'Cass and Frost determined that, as sociological constructs, the terms
status consumption and
conspicuous consumption denote different sociological behaviours. About the ambiguities of denotation and connotation of the term
conspicuous consumption, R. Mason (1984) reported that the classical, general theories of consumer decision-processes do not readily accommodate the construct of "conspicuous consumption", because the nature of said socio-economic behaviours varies according to the social class and the economic group studied. • Motivations – Paurav Shukla (2010) says that, whilst marketing and sales researchers recognise the importance of the buyer's social and psychological environment, the definition of the term
status-directed consumption remains ambiguous, because the development of a comprehensive general theory requires that social scientists accept two fundamental assumptions, which usually do not concord. First, though the "rational" (economic) and the "irrational" (psychologic) elements of consumer decision-making often influence a person's decision to buy particular goods and services, marketing and sales researchers usually consider the rational element dominant in a person's decision to buy the particular goods and services. Second, the consumer perceives the
utility of the product (the goods, the services) as a prime consideration in evaluating its usefulness, i.e. the
reason to buy the product. These assumptions, required for the development of a general theory of brand selection and brand purchase, are problematic, because the resultant theories tend either to misunderstand or to ignore the "irrational" element in the behaviour of the buyer-as-consumer; and because conspicuous consumption is a behaviour predominantly "psychological" in motivation and expression, Therefore, a comprehensive, general theory of conspicuous consumption would require a separate construct for the psychological (irrational) elements of the socio-economic phenomenon that is conspicuous consumption. == Examples ==