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View Full Version : A New Way of Looking At Race and Conspicuous Consumption


fuzzis
01-14-2008, 01:53 PM
Cos and Effect (http://www.slate.com/id/2181822)

Bill Cosby may be right about African-Americans spending a lot on expensive sneakers—but he's wrong about why.

...In general, the poorest people in any group are forced to opt out of the conspicuous consumption arms race—if you can't afford the signal, even by stretching your finances, you can't play the game. I, a humble economics professor, don't try to compete in a wealth-signaling game with the Wall Street traders whom I see on the streets of Manhattan. But this still leaves us with the question of why a black person would spend so much more in trying to signal wealth than a white person. The Cosby explanation—that there is simply a culture of consumption among black Americans—doesn't quite cut it for economists. We prefer to account for differences in behavior by looking to see if there are differing incentives.

Why would otherwise-similar black and white households have different incentives to signal their wealth? Charles, Hurst, and Roussanov argue that it's because blacks and whites are seeking status in different communities. In the racially divided society we live in, whites are trying to impress other whites, and blacks are trying to impress other blacks. But because poor blacks are more likely to live among other poor blacks than poor whites are to live among other poor whites, poor black families are more susceptible to being pulled into a signaling game with their neighbors. ...

and

...To test their theory, the authors look at how much a white family spends on conspicuous consumption when it is surrounded by white families making a similar amount of money. They find that this white family spends the same portion of its income on visible goods as a black family surrounded by other black families with similar incomes. They also find that the further a family of either race slips behind the average income of nearby households of the same race (becoming too poor to compete in the signaling game), the less it spends on these visible goods.

Once these effects are accounted for, racial disparities in visible consumption disappear. It's not that black Americans are more inclined to signal wealth; rather, poor blacks are more likely than poor whites to be a part of communities where they are relatively rich enough to participate in the signaling game....

Interesting.

aaron
01-14-2008, 03:09 PM
I really wasn't aware that people still bought expensive sneakers till I saw Cosby's comments. I thought expensive shoes (for men at least) went out as soon as Nike stopped making Air Jordan's.

PHDPLEASE
01-14-2008, 03:23 PM
Actually, Jordan just came out with a new pair of "Airs". They are actually considered a "green" product becuase of the material composition...

dollfus46
01-14-2008, 04:49 PM
Actually, Jordan just came out with a new pair of "Airs". They are actually considered a "green" product becuase of the material composition...

Yep. Price tag? $240 Shepard Smith on FoxNews is my source of information.

dollfus46
01-14-2008, 04:57 PM
Cos and Effect (http://www.slate.com/id/2181822)

Bill Cosby may be right about African-Americans spending a lot on expensive sneakers—but he's wrong about why.



and



Interesting.

:confused: What did you glean from this "research?" Because I just sat with a blank look on my face after reading it.

Conveyor Belt
01-14-2008, 05:50 PM
I mean, I guess.

I know several black families who don't have anything to show. They're surrounded by other poor black families. I know poor white families that don't have anything to show.

I think it's a bit deeper than economics and geography.

dollfus46
01-14-2008, 06:20 PM
What is this? Poor folk playing "Keeping up with the Poor Joneses?

Blockhead
01-19-2008, 04:57 AM
I think the main difference is that blacks put in the effort to make themselves appear "ghetto phabulous", whereas whites put in the effort to keep the poorer people out of their neighborhoods. Some nonsense about "property value" or something.