How Being Materialistic Can Actually Make You Happy

Why buying that big-screen TV might be more fulfilling than spending time with the family

May 1, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Americans these days are more careful than ever about their purchasing decisions. The recession has taken a big bite out of consumer spending, affecting all Americans—even the wealthy ones. A recent Gallup Poll found that since the financial crisis began in September, people with incomes over $90,000 have slashed their per-day spending by 40 percent. Personal consumption has fallen in four of the past six months. The resulting crunch in lavish spending has punished high-end retailers. Some commentators have even come up with a new term: "luxury shame," when affluent consumers feel it's necessary to conceal their exorbitant purchases in a weak economy.

Accumulating stuff may no longer be chic, as consumers look for other ways to find pleasure, such as spending more time with the family. But what if they're wrong? What if fulfillment really could be found in buying that iPod or jewelry you've been salivating over?

Consumer behavior and psychological research has found all sorts of counterintuitive lessons about how we shop. So it's not surprising that a forthcoming study in the Journal of Consumer Research shatters some myths about materialism. The results may change the way Americans have been squeezing every ounce of fulfillment they can out of each purchase.

1. Money can't buy happiness? Not true. The old adage goes "Money can't buy happiness," but people usually mean "Material goods can't buy happiness." Spending time with the wife and kids on a camping getaway costs money, but it's the kind of spending that is worthwhile and fulfilling. At least, that's the conventional wisdom. "Most people think materialism is not a good thing," says Joseph K. Goodman, assistant professor of marketing at the Olin Business School at Washington University in St. Louis and one of the authors of the study. "They think you're not going to get happiness through possessions."

The flipside to material spending is experiential spending, or spending on experiences like the aforementioned camping example. Goodman says that the prevailing view among psychologists has long been that, for each dollar spent, experiential purchases tend to be "better" purchases than material purchases.. People can more easily forget about the bad things from an experience and focus on the positive. Being positive isn't so easy with material spending. "It's easier to fudge the size of the fish you caught than to fudge your feelings about the couch you see every day," says Goodman. But when Goodman put these feelings to the test, he found that the intuitive bias against possessions didn't always pan out. Sometimes, being materialistic really can make you happier.

2. Hindsight matters. Goodman, along with Julie R. Irwin, an associate professor of marketing at the McCombs School of Business at the University of Texas, and Leonardo Nicolao, a doctoral student there, conducted three experiments on undergrad participants. Two experiments asked the participants to recall different purchases—both material and experiential—and rate how happy the purchase makes them feel. In the third experiment, participants thought of three positive or negative purchases and then rated them on a continuum of how materialistic and how experiential those purchases were. They then rated their happiness with those purchases.

After tallying up the results of these experiments, Goodman found that the subjects of the experiment rated positive experiential purchases as more fulfilling than positive material purchases. As expected, memory seemed to favor good experiences. But what he discovered next defied his expectations. When it came to purchases that the subjects looked back upon with regret—such as "why did I buy that concert ticket?"—the results were flipped. "When a purchase turns out negatively, experience leads to less happiness," Goodman points out.

3. We adapt slowly . Why would a bad experience be especially negative? It turns out that we can't always gloss over the bad things we remember. Our most cherished memories are experiences—like that first kiss—rather than material things. But for the same reason that the good memories stick around, so do the bad memories. "We adapt to experiences slower," says Goodman.

His third experiment tested that element of time. At intervals from one day to two weeks after the experiment, he asked the subjects to rate the purchases they originally recalled. Feelings of happiness stayed more constant over time when it came to the experiential purchases than they did for the material purchases.

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I agree that experiential purchases in today's economy are a commodity, and I don't see anything wrong with that. I love to go to a korean/japanese style karaoke with friends, have a few drinks and sing songs together. This is an experiential commodity, we pay for the room rental and the drinks. We have fun elsewhere without the location, but I still like going to the karaoke bar, it has its advantages. Moreover, we need to mass produce goods and consume them to have any semblance of a modern economy and therefore access to the consumer goods that do (honestly, look at your possessions) make our lives easier. Being materialistic is good --- consumerism is good.

Jim of WA 11:29PM February 20, 2012

Ok so let's help the people who don't enjoy the camping thing as costing money or non materialistic. It's materialistic because you need things for camping, tents, RV, tools to cook with, naturally you aren't going to buy worthless versions of those so that right there is materialistic.

Next is the "just a thought" person. Unless you can't create an authentic camping area in your backyard, which will somehow not cost any money, and include real animals, a river with fish, wood to burn and so on. then yes, you don't have to spend the money to go off camping. but the memories you get from camping are different from ones if you were downtown or at the park, memories that all required spending money to get there.

steven of GA 11:09AM July 18, 2011

Spending money on a camping trip is not spending money on a material item.. consumerism is the idea of spending money on useless items that are seen as 'wants' rather than needs.. spending money towards a family trip is useful and should not be seen as materialistic

Shawna of MT 8:44PM January 12, 2011

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