Learn Before
Consumption as Social Signaling
Consumption serves purposes beyond basic biological or practical needs. Activities like eating are not just for nutrition, clothing is not solely for warmth, and housing is more than simple shelter. The quality, quantity, and cost of the goods and services people consume—such as what they wear, drive, or eat—act as a social signal, communicating their societal position to both themselves and others.
0
1
Tags
Science
Economy
CORE Econ
Social Science
Empirical Science
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.3 Doing the best you can: Scarcity, wellbeing, and working hours - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Consumption as Social Signaling
An individual decides to take on extra shifts at work, sacrificing some of their weekend leisure time. From the perspective of an economic model of individual choice, what is the most fundamental explanation for this decision?
The Value of Choice in Consumption
Income, Consumption, and Work Behavior
According to the standard economic model of individual choice, a person's well-being is directly and solely determined by the amount of income they earn.
Income, Consumption, and Well-being
An experienced architect is offered two positions. Job A offers a significantly higher salary but requires 60-hour work weeks and extensive travel, leaving little time for personal hobbies. Job B offers a lower salary but has a standard 40-hour work week, allowing the architect to spend ample time on their passion for painting. The architect chooses Job B. From an economic perspective focused on individual choice and well-being, which statement best analyzes this decision?
A freelance graphic designer can produce a final design by spending hours working. Due to fatigue and creative drain, the first hour of work on a project is highly productive, but each subsequent hour yields a smaller amount of progress. This relationship between hours worked and design completion can be visualized as a curved 'feasible frontier' between the designer's free time and their output. Based on this information, which statement accurately analyzes the designer's trade-off?
Match each individual's decision to the underlying economic principle it best illustrates regarding the relationship between income, consumption, and well-being.
Evaluating Forms of Compensation
In economic models of individual choice, the primary value of income is not its numerical amount, but its ability to facilitate ______, which is the ultimate source of an individual's satisfaction or well-being.
Learn After
Conspicuous Consumption
Hypothesis: Shifting Preferences Towards Consumption in the US and Sweden
Analyzing Housing Choices
A recent college graduate receives a significant promotion and decides to purchase a luxury Swiss watch for $10,000, even though their smartphone and a $50 watch both tell time accurately. From an economic perspective that considers social factors, which of the following best analyzes this decision?
Evaluating the Scope of Social Signaling
A model for a single, representative firm indicates that if the cost of job loss for an employee decreases (e.g., due to higher unemployment benefits), the firm must offer a higher wage to motivate its workers. If this model is scaled up to represent an entire economy by assuming it consists of many identical firms operating under the same conditions, what is the logical consequence for the economy-wide model?
Analyzing Consumer Choices in Dining
An individual's decision to purchase a durable, unbranded, and purely functional winter coat, chosen solely for its warmth and longevity, is an action that falls completely outside the theory of consumption as a social signal.
Two individuals with similar incomes and daily commutes need to buy a new car. Individual A purchases a reliable, fuel-efficient, and modestly priced sedan. Individual B purchases a luxury sports car with a world-renowned brand name, which costs significantly more and has higher fuel and maintenance expenses. Which statement best analyzes the primary economic motivation behind Individual B's choice, according to the theory of consumption as a social signal?
Explaining Consumer Behavior Beyond Utility
A social media influencer purchases a new, limited-edition luxury sports car and posts about it online. A commenter criticizes the purchase, stating, 'This is a complete waste. A car's only purpose is transportation, and a much cheaper vehicle would do the same job.' From the perspective of consumption as a social signal, which statement provides the most robust evaluation of the commenter's argument?
Analyze the following consumption scenarios. Match each scenario with the statement that best describes the primary economic motivation at play, distinguishing between actions driven by practical utility and those driven by social signaling.