The “experiential advantage” is not universal – the less well-off get equal or more happiness from buying things – Research Digest

Authored by digest.bps.org.uk and submitted by mvea
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Being rich(er) may not guarantee happiness, as shown by ample evidence from the social sciences, but there are ways of spending money that will make you happier than others. Recent research has uncovered the “experiential advantage”: greater happiness from spending money on experiences (holidays, meals, theatre tickets) instead of material things (gadgets, clothes, jewellery). This could be for a number of reasons, such as experiences being more closely aligned with our values and being less likely to produce rumination and regret. There are exceptions to this rule, of course. Studies have found that personality traits can influence whether experiences or things make a person happiest; for example, introverts are made much happier by spending vouchers in a bookshop than a bar.

Another likely exception, that hasn’t previously been studied, is how social class, and specifically access to resources, affects this experiential advantage. Indeed, most research in this area has been performed with college students, who are typically more affluent than the general population, and there are reasons to believe that those who are less well-off might prefer material goods. For them, buying things as opposed to experiences could be more practical: they last longer, can be used multiple times and potentially resold in the future. To put this reasoning to the test, a recent paper in Psychological Science investigated whether the experiential advantage is diminished or absent for people who can afford very little compared with those who can afford a lot.

Jacob Lee and colleagues began by assessing the social status of hundreds of US citizens – most of them recruited via Amazon’s survey website – using the MacArthur Scale of Subjective Social Status, a ladder with 10 rungs representing relative social standing. At the top are people with the most money, most education and most respected jobs, while the bottom rung represents the worst off in society. Participants indicate where on this ladder they sit, which has been shown to be often more accurate than objective indicators of class, like income and education.

In the first experiment, participants recalled recent experiential and material purchases, and rated which one made them happier on a scale from -3 (definitely experiential purchase) to 3 (definitely object purchase). As predicted, those on a lower “rung” of the social ladder reported greater happiness from purchasing objects, while their higher-class counterparts were made happier by experiences.

In a second experiment, participants were randomly assigned to think of either a recent material or experiential purchase they had made and rate how happy it made them. Again, there was a significant interaction between class and purchase type, with an experiential advantage for higher-class participants. Happiness did not vary by purchase type for the lower-class participants.

In their third and final experiment, the researchers manipulated feelings of affluence to demonstrate a causal effect of social class on the pleasure derived from different purchase types. Participants first recalled a recent material and experiential purchase. Then, half of the participants imagined their monthly income had increased by 50 per cent, while the other half imagined theirs had decreased by 50 per cent. To bring this hypothetical situation to life, the researchers also asked the participants to spend time thinking about how they would allocate their budget with this new income, and how financially comfortable or constrained they would feel.

Finally, the participants rated their comparative happiness from an experiential or material purchase. Crucially, this was either the two purchases they had recalled at the beginning of the task, or two imagined purchases they would make now (with their new income). In this way, the researchers were able to demonstrate the difference between the purchase types when participants were primed to feel richer or poorer. Sure enough, there was an experiential advantage in the resource-abundant condition, and a trend towards material purchases in the deprivation condition, although this did not reach statistical significance. These findings are important because they imply a causal effect of access to resources: regardless of existing income, increasing or reducing an individual’s perception of their financial stability affected what type of purchase made them happier.

One underlying factor that could contribute to this effect is the amount of time available for experiences. It seems likely that more affluent individuals will have more free time or paid leave as well as disposable income, compared to those working several minimum-wage jobs to make ends meet. This could affect how appealing different purchase types are to both groups, an interpretation supported by lower social class participants in the current studies reporting a lower tendency to make experiential purchases than their higher-class peers.

This introduces the possibility that experiential purchases designed to create extra leisure time, like hiring a cleaner or having the groceries delivered, could be especially valued by the less well-off, building on recent research by Ashley Whillans and colleagues that suggested people who prioritise time over money are happier and that making time-saving purchases has a positive impact on wellbeing.

The most obvious limitation of the new research is its reliance on recall tasks. Memory is fallible and we are notoriously bad at knowing what makes us happy, so future studies would benefit from measuring happiness before and after participants make actual purchases of either type. It’s telling that in Whillans’ time-saving research, very few respondents chose to allocate money to save time, despite the results showing that doing so had the greatest impact on happiness. This implies we can’t necessarily rely on the purchases people make, or what they think about them, as an indicator for what is best for wellbeing.

For now, this new research adds further nuance to our understanding of the complex relationship between money, purchases and happiness, suggesting that what makes you happiest could depend on anything from your income to your personality type to your amount of free time.

—Experiential or Material Purchases? Social Class Determines Purchase Happiness

Post written for the BPS Research Digest by Juliet Hodges. Juliet has a background in psychology and behavioural economics, and has applied this in advertising and now healthcare. Follow @hulietjodges on Twitter, LinkedIn or read her posts for the Bupa Newsroom here.

Steakleather on September 4th, 2018 at 16:15 UTC »

For people with little money, buying material things is an experience.

fikis on September 4th, 2018 at 16:14 UTC »

There is definitely connection between OP study and the one that found that "Money DOES make you more happy (if you don't yet have a household income of about $75k)"...

It's like, if you don't have enough for the basics, then more money will help, and buying things that you need is the most direct and obvious way to make your life better.

Once you get past the needs, though...it's counterproductive to just keep acquiring stuff, and it makes much more sense to start focusing on experiences.

OldManMangler on September 4th, 2018 at 14:29 UTC »

I wonder (and I’m being earnest here) how much of it has to do with how when you “buy an experience” for much of it you’re usually being catered to. Is it that these people prefer the rock climbing trip, or how their guide and the hotel staff treat them like royalty while they participate in said trip? Does the experience itself matter versus the experience of being given an experience?

And, as a poor, are we equating relief with happiness? Like “Oh thank Christ I finally have a car with an air conditioner.” or is it legit “Woooo! New TV!”? Because I’m pretty sick of these weird white lines ghosting across my TV that I’ve been putting up with for 6 months and will therefor be pretty damn happy when I replace it. Like I can’t even watch anything with subtitles because I won’t be able to see through the white fence they’ll put over the picture. So when I finally pay off my last hospital bill and can buy a new TV I’m seriously going to be elated. Whereas the well-to-do person who is simply upgrading to an 8K curved model just because isn’t really as likely to feel invested in that purchase.

Plus, as a poor who’s had experiences, I find that vacations are actually pretty stressful. I don’t feel particularly entitled to them thanks in large part to my employer acting like my earned time off is a burden to them. I need to continue checking my email so that I don’t come back to a disaster. I’ve budgeted for the trip, sure, but how accurately? I’ve never done this before so there’s all sorts of expenses incurred I may not have been able to anticipate. And, staying at a budget hotel (Holiday Inn Express in the off season is living it up man) no one, and I mean no one, is treating me with any more than the courtesy you expect in a Target checkout line. Experiential purchases just tend to be different by class is my point.

I don’t know. The wording “think about how happy it made you” etc is pretty vague. Seems like it needs a bit of specificity injected into it. Curious to see a more detailed study in the future.