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Research
on Materialism and Well-Being
Tim
Kasser, Ph.D., Knox College
Modern
advertising attempts to convince people that the pursuit of wealth,
possessions, and image will make them happy. As such, it has the
goal of increasing the value people place on materialistic aims.
Yet
empirical research consistently documents that people who believe
materialistic values are relatively important also have a lower
quality of life. Studies show people with strong materialistic values
report:
1.
Lower Personal Well-being:
-
less happiness
- less satisfaction with life
- less vitality
- lower general functioning |
 |
-
more depression
- more anxiety
- more physical problems
- more drug use |
These
results have been demonstrated in teenagers, college students and
adults, and in the U.S., England, South Korea, Singapore, Russia,
Germany, and India.
2.
Poorer relationships
-
less empathy
- less trust
|
 |
-
more conflict
- more manipulation |
People
with strong materialistic values also:
3.
Contribute less to the community
-
less desire to help others
- less cooperation |
 |
-
more antisocial
- more competition |
Conclusion:
Advertising to children spreads materialistic values, which undermine
well-being
Three
of many possible citations:
Cohen,
P., & Cohen, J. (1996). Life Values and Adolescent Mental
Health. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Kasser,
T., & Ryan, R. M. (1993). "A Dark Side of the American
Dream: Correlates of financial success as a central life aspiration."
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 65, 410-422.
Richins,
M. L., & Dawson, S. (1992). "A Consumer Values Orientation
for Materialism and Its Measurement: Scale development and validation."
Journal of Consumer Research, 19, 303-316.
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