2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jebo.2012.07.002
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Consumption and social identity: Evidence from India

Abstract: We examine spending on consumption items which have signaling value in social interactions across groups with distinctive social identities in India, where social identities are defined by caste and religious affiliations. The classification of such items was done by eliciting responses to a survey in India. We match the results of our survey with nationally representative micro data on household consumption expenditures. We find that disadvantaged caste groups such as Other Backward Castes spend nine percent … Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(56 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
(11 reference statements)
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“…Though the conspicuous goods identified (Khamis et al 2012) in our analysis meet the technical criteria (visible and high-income elasticity) for being conspicuous, some items have raised debate on their conspicuous value in prior research. For instance, Charles et al (2009) argue that certain social groups are likely to get differential treatment in the housing market and hence do not include the housing expenses in their analysis.…”
Section: Conspicuous Productsmentioning
confidence: 82%
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“…Though the conspicuous goods identified (Khamis et al 2012) in our analysis meet the technical criteria (visible and high-income elasticity) for being conspicuous, some items have raised debate on their conspicuous value in prior research. For instance, Charles et al (2009) argue that certain social groups are likely to get differential treatment in the housing market and hence do not include the housing expenses in their analysis.…”
Section: Conspicuous Productsmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…Using the methodology proposed by Charles et al (2009), Khamis et al (2012) conducted a study and categorized the consumption items measured in IHDS. Of the 47 consumption items in IHDS, 12 were identified (see Appendix 1) to be the most conspicuous (more than 20 % of respondents categorized these items as Bvisible^and Bhigher income consumption^).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A few papers show relative concerns playing an important role in India based, for instance, on wedding expenditure (Bloch et al (2004)) and more broadly conspicuous consumption (Khamis et al (2012)). Carlsson et al (2009) assess more specifically the role of castebased relative concerns in India, on the basis of a hypothetical choice experiment.…”
Section: Previous Findings On Class Conflictsmentioning
confidence: 99%