Hidden Brain - Episode 69: Money Talks
Episode Date: April 25, 2017How do you spend your money? On food, transportation, or housing? On shoes, cars, coffee, fancy restaurants? You might think you use money just to, you know, buy stuff. But as Neeru Paharia explains, ...the way we spend often says a lot about who we are, and what we want to project. We use money to express our values — by going to the local coffee shop instead of Starbucks, or by boycotting — or buycotting — Ivanka Trump shoes. We delete Uber; we refuse to fly United. We seek out or avoid Chick-fil-A. This week on Hidden Brain, the ways we use our money to tell stories about ourselves, and to ourselves.
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Americans have long expressed their political views with their wallets.
In recent months, this has ramped up with boycotts and with buycotts.
That's where people express support by buying a company's products.
For months now, Nordstrom has been on a list of Trump-affiliated companies to boycott.
This is just, it's a wonderful line, I own some of it, I fully, I'm going to just give it,
I'm going to give a free commercial here, go buy it today everybody.
I deleted Uber recently due to what happened at JFK Airport when it appeared that Uber
was essentially trying to break the strides.
Fueled the outrage and led to some people to call for a boycott of the airline.
It seems like people are a little fed up and disillusioned with sort of conventional political
channels where they would normally sort of conventional political channels
where they would normally sort of express their political views.
And so in the absence of that legitimacy, there's been sort of a rise in political consumerism.
Neuropeharia is a marketing professor at Georgetown University.
She studies how consumer behavior often serves psychological needs rather than economic
needs.
When we think about the way we spend money, we may think about the comfort of a nice pair
of shoes or the pleasure of a great meal.
But money also serves a deeper purpose.
We use money to express our feelings, to project our status, to defend our values.
The products we buy tell stories, stories that we tell others, stories that we tell ourselves.
For a small coffee shop, people don't really think much of the political situation, but
as soon as you put a large competitor in next door, say you put a Starbucks in next door,
all of a sudden it becomes a fight between the little guy and the big guy.
How money can talk?
This week on Hidden Brain.
Neuropejaria says she first became interested in the psychological power of consumer products
because of the diamond industry.
The diamond engagement ring, how else could two-month salary last forever? A diamond.
I studied economics as an undergraduate and one thing they tell you as an economics
major is that people are rational.
But as far as near a hotel, there was nothing particularly rational about buying a diamond.
Now, you can argue that diamonds are beautiful, but there are cheaper stones that are just
as pretty.
So then the question is, why are people spending so much money on these shiny rocks that
have no intrinsic value and you know there's effectively a perfect substitute?
And then it seemed like it was all this kind of psychological stuff that people wanted
to express their status, people wanted to kind of fit in with sort of the normative practices
in terms of marriage.
And it's just sort of dawned on me that products have all this psychological value and that's
worth real money.
I mean, a whole industry is based on just sort of pure kind of signaling and psychological
value.
And I found that to be really interesting and sort of at odds with this notion that people
are rational.
This idea made Neeru think about the other ways we use money as a signaling device to express
our beliefs and our values?
We enact our political will, usually, by voting or supporting different kinds of legislations
and things like that.
So it's kind of interesting when people start taking that civic actions, these kind of civic
actions into the market and then start by-coding or boycautting a certain brand or a certain company
in order to express their view. And you can kind of think about it in terms of what ends up being
more tangible. So if we think about voting, it's sort of an abstract process, it's not very public.
Whereas when you buy a product or avoid buying a product, it's very tangible.
If you're someone who doesn't buy flashy jewelry, you may say, okay, I'm not one of those
people who uses money to talk.
Maybe.
Or maybe you just don't use diamonds to talk, you use coffee.
I've studied the situations between small coffee shops and large coffee shops, and so I
have a paper where we show that for a small coffee shop, if it's just sitting
there by itself, people don't really think much of the political situation.
They just think more about the coffee, sort of about the more rational, economic features
and attributes of the product.
But as soon as you put a large competitor in next door, say you put a Starbucks in next
door, all of a sudden it becomes a fight between the little guy and the big guy, and then buying
your cup of coffee is really meaningful.
All of a sudden it's a symbol of what you believe in.
It's a symbol of you supporting the little guy, of you supporting the underdog and trying
to stick it to the man.
And it's so tangible, and I just find it so fascinating that that's sort of how we kind
of, we kind of express our political views on a daily basis and we feel, you know, powerful in a sense that we actually sort of have a say in this situation.
Companies, of course, pay attention to what consumers want. They understand that people don't just want to buy a cup of coffee or a computer.
They want the right story to go with that cup of coffee or computer.
This is why so many Silicon Valley companies that are worth billions of dollars spend so
much time telling us about their origin stories, how two kids dropped out of college to explore
a dream in someone's garage.
So this is what we call, we have another paper around underdog brand biographies and this
sort of idea of kind of starting in a garage from humble beginnings,
but overcoming obstacles to kind of fulfill your dream.
That's a really compelling narrative, especially to Americans.
I think because of the whole kind of pull yourself up from your bootstraps and this whole notion
of the American dream.
And so companies that take advantage of that narrative, and if they use it effectively,
even as they
grow, can kind of remind consumers that this was a small company and they might identify
with it more and less penalize them less for being a large company.
There tends to be sort of a kind of an aversion or a disdain for large companies.
People tend to identify a lot more with smaller companies. And you tell the story of Nantucket Nectars, which also has the same sort of start-up story?
A lot of companies, they talk about how Nantucket Nectars in particular talks about how they
started with a blender and a dream, and Cliffbar talks about how they started in their garage
with, he was living with his dog and his skis and
you know, was cooking and it's a sort of underdog narrative that makes use of
the sort of external disadvantage but really trying hard and I think people
really find that story resonating because I think we all on some level feel like
underdogs and so it sort of is can be motivating to us. Companies are also extremely skilled at selling us things that are tied to a certain
sense of identity.
I remember this set of ads that Apple was running some years ago where they basically
suggested that people who bought Macs were hyper and cooler than people who bought PCs.
Hello, I'm Mac.
And I'm a PC.
I'm a free to ask.
Well, I was sitting on my desk.
Yeah. Someone walked by,
carelessly tripped over my power cord,
yanked me straight down to the ground.
Bam!
Yikes!
Mac would come with this power cord that connects magnetically,
so when it gets pulled, it just pops right off.
Everything's just kind of thought out.
You know, like the tiny built-in ice I carry.
My life is flashing before my eyes. I see a sunset in a field of beautiful wheat.
Isn't that your screensaver?
Yeah.
They were basically saying,
if you buy this kind of computer, it sends a signal of the kind of person you are.
It's not so much about your status, but how cool you are.
Yeah, and I think being cool is also a form of status.
There's actually recent research on this by Warren and Campbell, and they talk about
how coolness is essentially another way of kind of signaling your status, which can be
very compelling to certain groups of consumers.
You want to signal their autonomy, that they're not just drones and just kind of following
the masses, but that they're autonomous,
that they have control and are kind of independently minded.
There is some irony here in an advertising campaign
by a major company trying to convince people
that if you buy products made by that company,
you're actually acting independently and autonomously.
When in fact the advertising is actually making you do what the company wants you to do.
Yeah, it is interesting.
I mean, I remember in high school that there was a whole group of kids who would wear
Metallica shirts and they were trying to show how different
they were, but yet they were all wearing Metallica shirts and so they were sort of, it was
sort of defeated the purpose on some level, but it wasn't immediately apparent to them.
One thing that Neurohose found is that consumers are attracted not just to high-end brands,
but to powerful brands.
Walmart can be a status symbol.
Yeah, it's kind of interesting. So there's this relationship between status and power.
And so status is a way, it's sort of what we get when we have power. And so when we think
about power, we can think about Walmart as being a really powerful brand. It has a lot of
strength in the marketplace. And so that strength, that kind of access to power, having a lot of resources as a brand in itself,
even though it's kind of a low-end brand, if you compare it to other low-end brands,
that can be kind of attractive to people who care about status.
When we come back, I'm going to speak to Nero about how we use money not just to express
our values, but to ignore them.
Stay with us.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanthan.
Many of us understand the economic choices we make and have real ethical consequences.
The products we buy can adversely affect the environment or take advantage of poor people
in distant countries.
We can buy stuff from stores that treat their employees well, or we can buy things sometimes
at a cheaper price from stores that treat their employees poorly.
Often after a big new story about conditions at sweatshops or the use of child labor,
this public outrage.
But as Nero Paharia has explored, our actions don't always match our rhetoric.
She wants to throw the paper on the subject title, sweatshop labor is wrong unless the
shoes are cute.
The idea there is that you kind of decide how much you like something and so you really
like a pair of shoes.
And so then kind of the moral reasoning starts from there.
It doesn't start from kind of a neutral place where you're like,
where you say, oh, a sweatshirt labor is wrong.
You know, under any circumstances, I don't want to subject people
to these unfortunate working conditions.
It actually starts at a place where you're like,
well, the product's really nice.
And the shoes look really good on me.
And then you start reasoning about it.
And that's called motivated reasoning.
So rather than think about morality in terms of this kind of objective thing, we kind of
think about it more like a lawyer.
So we decide what we want.
And then we kind of come up with the reasons to support it.
So we may say, oh, if we see a pair of shoes that we don't like,
we may say, oh, switch up labor is wrong.
I don't like switch up labor.
I don't approve.
But if the shoes are cute, you might say something like,
oh, it's OK, because people need jobs.
Your companies need to make money.
So you'll be more likely to agree with these things
because you're motivated.
In a sense, the shoes are really cute.
You really want them.
And so you want to find a way to kind of reconcile your kind of distaste for this situation
and the kind of the reality of it.
And you've actually conducted experiments which show that people are more likely to reach
for these kinds of rationalizations when they actually like a product.
Yes, exactly. So if they like a product, if you show them sort of an attractive pair of shoes,
they'll be more likely to agree with these economic justifications.
If you show them an unattractive pair of shoes, all of a sudden they become these kind
of moral animals who say, oh no, it's wrong.
And so the idea is that we just decide what is moral based on, you know, how much we want
something.
What one thing you've looked at is that we're often willing to go along with products that are
ethically problematic so long as we can come up with a way to distance ourselves from
the unethical behavior that produced it.
The more distance we can put between ourselves and the unethical behavior or the unethical
action, the easier it becomes to perform.
This goes to the idea that if I went to the
grocery store and asked for a chicken and they went out and killed a chicken for me, I would
feel worse about that than if I was just picking up the chicken from a tray. And of course,
in both cases, a chicken had to be killed. But in one case, I feel like I have actually
asked for the chicken to be killed. In the other case, the dirty walk has already been done.
Yeah. So there's a number of things that sort of enable us to not feel so close to the harm.
I mean, essentially, you're buying a product from a company, but what you're doing is you're
hiring them to do kind of this dirty work for you. So say any clothing company, they're the ones
who hire, you know, a child and maybe, child and maybe under some unfortunate conditions.
You're not directly actually hiring that person.
But I think the second thing that happens is this idea of the order of how kind of supply
and demand happens.
So we live in an economy where most items are produced first.
And so they're already produced.
They're already in the store.
And so when you go to the
store, the damage has been done, so to speak. So it's already been done, it's already happened, but
imagine that you went into that same store and you had to order your chicken or your clothes on
demand. So if you order it on demand, you know, they then they will put a child, you know, have
them work under these unfortunate conditions
and then you start feeling responsible and guilty for this situation where when it's already happened,
you feel like, oh, well, it's already happened and I'm not responsible for it.
And I think people don't really kind of see this broader role that consumers have in creating
demand for these kinds of products. They don't see that A causes B because it sort of happens backwards,
that they actually make the product first, and then you decide if you want it.
But if we lived in an economy that was all on demand, then it would happen the other way.
You would decide you want it, and then they would make it,
and then there would be a stronger connection,
kind of a stronger cause-and-effect connection,
that I think people would then feel a bit more responsible
and a bit more guilty for these kinds of situations.
I can imagine that people would feel horrible
if they said I want a shirt
and they have to send some poor nine-year-old kid
into the basement to make the shirt for the next six hours.
I mean, people would feel awful about that.
Yeah, and I think people wouldn't do it it and so then it kind of gets to this question of,
does the economic structure and the structure of how goods are made,
does the kind of logistical structure impact how we think about ethics and how we think about our own role
in enabling these kinds of harms?
The companies who make stuff for us are run by people and those people have minds in enabling these kinds of harms.
The companies who make stuff for us are run by people, and those people have minds that work like our minds.
So, should companies no surprise that just as consumers
would rather have companies do the dirty work for them,
to distance themselves from the ethical consequences
of their economic actions, companies often choose to do exactly
the same thing.
Rather than run a factory that makes clothing
under offer working conditions,
why not outsource the dirty work to someone else?
If a reporter I know it's details of poor working conditions,
you can now plausibly say,
but I didn't know about it.
In many cases, companies actually do outsource the harm,
so rather than own the factory that makes the clothing under these
terrible conditions, we outsource them to other firms that are owned by other entities.
So a lot of these companies do try and claim that they had no knowledge of this, this did
not happen within the boundaries of my firm.
It turns out that both individuals and companies often prefer to be kept in the dark
about unethical practices that are further up the supply chain.
So there was a really, really interesting paper by Julie Irwin and some other colleagues
who wrote a paper on this idea of willful ignorance.
And the idea was that you had a product and you had access to a whole bunch of different pieces of information.
And one of them was the labor conditions or the environmental conditions.
And the question was, do people actually ask for this information?
You can look at it if you want, but you could decide not to look at it.
And it turns out people didn't want to look at that information because they didn't really
want to be confronted with this kind of conflict between their beliefs and what they really wanted.
And they found this effect was stronger for people who cared more about labor issues, who
cared more about environmental issues.
They were more likely to avoid this information in order to kind of avoid this conflict.
Think of the deep irony of what Nero just said.
The folks who care the most about ethics might be most willing to turn a blind eye to unethical
business practices because they know if they found out about those practices, they would
feel obliged to do something about it.
We've talked about the many ways in which consumers and companies play games with one
another using products to speak on their behalf or using products behind which they can hide.
But there's one dimension of economic activity we haven't explored, and that's time.
I asked Nero how some of us use our calendars to broadcast our social status.
It used to be that people want broadcast their social status by being idle.
But that idea has been turned on its head in the United States.
It turns out nowadays that people who are busier actually seem to have more social status.
So rather than somebody who is very wealthy, who could waste their time, take fancy vacations, invest in learning
these kind of archaic mannerisms.
It turns out the person who works really hard,
who's really busy, who's very effortful,
is the one who's seen to have more social status.
And I think in part, that is because we live
in a society that values social mobility.
So we actually conducted the study in the US and
we conducted the same study in Italy and we found that for Italian people they thought the person who
was living a life of leisure had more status. Of course they have so much money they can just
relax all the time. Whereas in the US they thought the person who was working all the time
actually had more status and I think what was going on was that in the time actually had more status. And I think what was going
on was that in the US people sort of value this sense of earned status. So status can be
earned in the US where I think in Italy it's more of a society where status is inherited.
So for example, my co-author is Italian and she's always talking about how people come
from good families or not. And so there's very much this idea that your status isn't necessarily something that you earn but you inherit.
And so in that sense, working hard really wouldn't get you anywhere, whereas in America
you have this sense that you can actually climb the ladder.
And so celebrities, for example, might say instead of saying, you know, I make one movie
every year and I get to hang out on the beach for the other 10 months of the year.
They actually are suggesting, oh my god, I'm so overworked.
Yeah, so we actually looked at tweets of celebrities who were tagged with this hashtag Humble
Bragg, this idea of bragging, but sort of disguising it as a complaint.
And a lot of the tweets we found had to do with being busy.
So, you know, I have to be in the recording studio this morning and then I have a book And a lot of the tweets we found had to do with being busy.
So, you know, I have to be in the recording studio this morning, and then I have a book meeting in the afternoon, and then I have to travel to New York and the evening, and Hashtag I have no life, you know, these kinds of tweets.
You're trying to say something about yourself. You're busy, you're really important.
You don't have time to do other things. And so, you see that on social media that's kind of an acceptable and effective way to show
your status by telling people how busy you are.
Newer I want to ask about your own life, which is I understand that growing up, you came
from a family that in some ways prized not demonstrating its commitment to status, that
actually prized not buying the expensive things as a way to show off.
So I'm of East Indian origin and my parents immigrated to this country and it turns out in East Indian communities showing your social status is a very, very important thing. So people are really, really motivated
to show their status.
And when I was growing up, that was happening
through buying really expensive cars.
So a lot of my parents' friends, they had jaguires,
and they had Mercedes.
And I remember I went to a friend's house one time,
and they had a jaguire.
She was also Indian.
And I asked her, she was complaining about her mom kind of being
frugal about different things. And I said, oh, that's so strange because, you know, she's
frugal and yet you have a jaguar. And she said, oh, well, that's just to show off. And I
just, the candidness of that moment really, really, you know, sparked something in my mind,
like, wow, people are just trying to show off in my, my mom also would often complain about how all her friends would buy these expensive cars and the only reason they were doing it was to show off.
And so I just, I kind of got really fascinated with this idea of showing your social status. And I think kind of an evidence of how things are shifting now towards, maybe towards something like busyness,
now all her friends are retired,
and they all brag about how busy they are.
And now my mom complains about everyone
talks about how busy they are all the time.
So I think it's sort of an evolving,
kind of an evolving mechanism.
Ha ha ha.
Niro Baharia is a marketing professor
at Georgetown University.
Niro, thank you for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Thanks for having me.
This week's episode was produced by Maggie Pennman,
and edited by Tara Boyle.
Our team includes Jenny Schmidt, Raina Cohen, and Renee Clark.
A special shout out to our amazing winter intern, Chloe Connolly,
who's off to new adventures this week.
Best of luck, Chloe, we're gonna
miss you.
For more Hidden Brain, follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
You can also listen for my stories each week on your local public radio station.
Our unsung hero this week is Steve Inskeep.
He's the host of Morning Edition and he played a vital role in developing Hidden Brain
on the radio.
He loves learning new things and he approaches every story with an enthusiasm that's infectious.
Shankar, I'm so honored that you were willing to take a little bit of your very precious time.
I barely have time to say thanks to you.
I'm Shankar Vedatam, and this is NPR.
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