Money and Status: It Really Is Up to You

by Will Wilkinson on July 12, 2007

Ezra likes to caricature my claim about the multidimensional, opt-in/opt-out nature of status races as “the idea that otherwise pathetic people can be really respected in Everquest.” This is, of course, true. And it is also true that you can choose your career, choose where you will live, choose whether to marry, choose whether to have children, choose what causes to join, what stores to shop at, choose what to buy in them, etc., etc. with straightforward implications on your experience of status. As far as I can tell, however, Ezra thinks all this is doubtful, which is completely mystifying, since I think it’s pretty obvious. Ezra:

[Liberal arts degreees, obscure Russian poets and vanity bands are] also for very young people. Braxton’s life is essentially defined by an absence of responsibilities, dangers, or economic ties. He’s young and healthy, single (but hanging out with an awesome girl!), doesn’t own a home, doesn’t appear to have college debt, etc. Income doesn’t define his status because, at the moment, he doesn’t much need income. This will change. Quickly. And then income will define his status — and not just in an envious manner. Income will define whether his kid gets to go to a good school, and whether his family is safe from medical emergencies, and whether his clothing makes him look suitable for promotion. The ability to seek fulfillment in other realms will not vanish as he ages, but his capacity to eschew material concerns and forsake financial security will.

The imaginary Braxton, like Ezra and me (despite being so old), is in a major life stage sociologist Michael Rosenfeld calls “the age of independence,” as detailed in this interesting Kieran Healy post. Whether he is going to need a lot of income soon depends on the choices he makes. He could go on just like that for a long time, if he wants, like I have. If it is in the end ”just a phase” (and what isnt?), it is by no means a trivial phase. If the denizens of wealthy liberal democracies now spend longer portions of life free to explore their interests without the necessity of earning high incomes, that seems like a kind of triumph.  

Morevover, if Braxton partners and chooses to have children, requiring extra income, it is completely open to him (and completely normal) to see that income as an instrument to raising his children, not as a signifier of status. And income has almost nothing to do with whether his kid gets to go to a good school. Where he chooses to live does. This might require some hard tradeoffs. Good public schools might not be available in the Boston neighborhoods Braxton can afford, where his friends are. But they are available in Omaha in neighborhoods he can afford. And it’s probably a better music scene, too. If he decides to get a different kind of job so he can afford a place in a Boston neighborhood with good schools, we’ve got to keep in mind that there is no sense whatsoever in which unavoidable circumstances forced him into this. His preferences — for children, for Boston — did. We are not entitled to whatever we at the price we want wherever we want.

Millions upon millions of people in societies like ours spend their whole lives and raise families on modest artist, editor, teacher, or non-profit incomes because they prefer it over ready alternatives that provide larger incomes. Their status comes from being well-received and respected in their communities, whatever their communities may be. Being a beloved school teacher, a leader of a community theater, or the social pillar of a church are the kinds of sources of real status that most people do enjoy and emphasize in their lives. Everquest is good, too. Why demean the way people choose to live?

Ezra needs to put down the Robert Frank. Frank needs to establish that the rat race is something like an inevitability to get the conceptual machinery behind his policy proposals churning, but he can’t, and so it doesn’t. Narrowly materialist status pursuits just aren’t an inevitability and it is so easy to show it that I really wonder what’s going on psychologically and ideologically with people who keep trying to sell us on this. Give me a week and I’ll find a hundred stories of people who have chosen a life in which income in not their main source (or even a source) of status. Give me a year and I’ll find five thousand stories. What does it take? 

Also, Frank has never shown that his conclusions about tax policy even follow from his premises. As David Weisbach, director of the U of Chicago Law & Economics program, makes clear:

This [Frank's] simple intuition [about status] does not tell us anything about the likely effects of status on the tax rate schedule.  For example, increasing progressivity would move everyone closer together.  This might decrease status competition, because the gains from competition are smaller – it would be harder to separate yourself from the group.  On the other hand, it might increase status competition.  If you are closer to beating someone in a status race, you might try harder.  Thus, we can imagine status considerations leading to either a more progressive tax system or a less progressive tax system.

And, like Adam Smith and David Hume thought, in the right institutional and cultural context, the externalities of income-related status-seeking may be net positive, in which case a benevolent planner would subsidize it. So, the idea that people can’t help but seek social status through income and consumption is pretty clearly false in the first place, is of indeterminate policy implication in the second place, and, in the third place, it’s a pretty unattractively materialistic conception of human motivation for nice liberals (the leftwing homo economicus?).

I agree with Ezra that

To most people, money matters. A lot. Sometimes in absolute terms, sometimes in positional terms. Really good taste in vanity bands rarely pays the mortgage.

My point was precisely that money does matter. You need to live in a wealthy society to do the things Braxton does. Wealthy societies — societies in which uninternalized positive externalities run like milk and honey — are liberating. And in that kind of society, you can do these things without making a lot of money yourself.  The absolute amount of money you need, say, for a mortgage, depends on choices you make, mostly the choice of where to live. But the existence of a market in inexpensive secondhand electric guitars, lots of other people who play instruments, and a “scene” is not something you have to pay for yourself. And the importance of money as a positional matter depends on choices we make (especially if you consider the failure to break the hold of your accidental clique’s expectations as a choice, which I do). My point was precisely that vanity bands may not pay the mortgage, but it doesn’t matter, because you don’t have to have a mortgage to have a vanity band, a satisfying level of social status, or happiness. It doesn’t matter how old you are. Surely Ezra doesn’t  really think we are all fated to pin our hopes of esteem on our paychecks. So what are we really talking about?  

  • david
    I think you gloss over some costs to Braxton's ability
    to freely choose the path-less-followed. I greatly
    agree with you that an abundance of choices is what
    allows Braxton to have found a greater plateau of
    happiness by his opt-out. However, I think you
    are poo-pooing the cost-benefit equation when it
    comes to Braxton's ability to continue to do that
    forever. First, if Braxton should at some point now
    or later lose his job, he has less choices. If/when
    something of that nature (illness, or for instance
    a developmentally challenged sibling to care for, etc)
    suddenly enters his life, he will not have chosen it.
    At that point, his chances of continuing to opt-out
    in the ways he has chosen become a lot smaller, and
    it is by no means clear that he can expect to do what
    he is doing for 10 more years even if he avoids
    buying property or having children. What is the
    overall probability that this dislocation occurs?
    Not small for the population overall. And as for
    his ability to afford property in Omaha vs. Beacon
    Hill? Well, I would also say that you are poo-pooing
    the amount of cost associated with that choice,
    and that Braxton's choice-set are more limited
    than you admit. For many many people, proximity
    to nuclear family (for childcare if for no other
    reason), moving costs themselves, and re-employment
    search costs are too high for this to be simple.
    Moving costs alone dictate that substantial portions
    of people even in this developmental stage cannot
    reasonably opt from Boston to Omaha without serious
    risk of failure in the experiment.

    All that said, you're mostly right, but don't kid
    yourself about how limitless the possibilities are
    for opting out.
  • steve
    Jacob

    I don't think conspicuous consumption of the uber-wealthy is really the point. For that to be true there would have to be inter-"class" competition for status. Will, and others, as well as basic common sense has shown this not to be true: the guy making 100k doesn't compete for status with Bill Gates, hence he doesn't care what Bill "conspicuously consumes". In addition I am not convinced that there are no positive externalities to the consumption habits of the wealthy, even ones that seem based on status seeking. Almost all art, music, design, and so on seem to have their origins in the need for wealthy people separate themselves from each other. A good case for this could also be made for a lot of tech innovations and “useless” scholarly research.

    ......

    I really wonder how much Ezra and others really buy into this hooey. It seems, to me, a case of conformation bias. He already believes in a highly progressive tax schedule and would like to increase it, a new study/argument come along that supports his belief, so he defends it even though its obviously stupid. He is too smart for that.

    It reminds me of extreme supply-siders who put an excessive amount of weight on the “increased revenues” part of the theory. Not only is this not provable (if anything its actually false) but its also the weakest reason to support tax cuts. It seems to me to be superfluous and defeating to defend such weak arguments. Just let them go.

    Anyway, the main problem with governing the status seeking habits of individuals is that there is no end in sight. And it also seems to me that non-monetary status races are the most brutal. Winding up with the lesser house or car is pretty easy to get over, but coming in second when your chasing women or prestigious tenured position, well that just sucks. But, of course, that’s probably just my preference order.
  • Independent George
    Jacob - I disagree; I think there are definite positive externalities to conspicuous consumption. For example, the fools who were spending $15k on 40" High-Def TVs five years ago are the ones who make it possible to buy one today for $2k (personally, I'm waiting for the current wave of fools to make it possible to get it for under $1k).
  • On the whole, I agree with you. However, I don't think that status seeking via conspicuous consumption has positive externalities. The point is somewhat subtle, since positive externalities are generated by people who, in seeking status, work hard to make large incomes: they make a lot of money precisely by providing services that others find valuable. However, the consumption side of this coin doesn't generate any additional benefits. Rich people who engage in conspicuous consumption effectively encourage others to spend their time designing expensive handbags, et cetera, instead of doing something more useful with their lives.

    Taxes on luxury consumption might potentially do good. The idea isn't to flatten the wealth-based status hierarchy. Rather, such a tax would reduce the amount of money spent in the zero-sum game of consumptive status seeking, and spend it on something more useful, such as subsidies for healthcare, education, or science. This benefits society by encouraging people to become doctors, teachers, or scientists rather than handbag designers.

    Or, that's the idea, anyway. Using the tax code for social engineering can be a messy business. I'm also not sure whether it is even theoretically possible to do such a thing without providing disincentives for working and earning high incomes.
  • mk
    I think Ezra is kind of ditching the discussion of status, when he says:

    ...and when they worry about income as a marker of status, it's because that connection has tangible impacts on their lives and livelihoods.

    He's saying money affects well-being, which we all agree with. Status is explicitly a third wheel in his argument.

    You are right that we can choose our path in life. That path of course is constrained by what's possible. I don't have the "choice" of whether to flap my arms and fly to the moon. I also don't have the "choice" of whether to buy 5 Hummers or 6 today. So the realm of possible choices is partly determined by our wealth, and partly by other things (our innate capabilities, our current surroundings, etc.).

    I can't buy 6 Hummers now, but I can buy them later if I go to grad school and learn finance, then get a job and make big money. OK, why can I go to grad school? Well, I can pay for it, I am smart enough, I have the right educational background. OK, why do I have the right educational background? I was able to pay for college, I had enough aptitude, got good enough grades, etc.

    So of course many things factor into our choices, including how much money we have now (or had in the past). A person "A" who has a strictly smaller realm of choices than person "B" is in a strictly less-good position. Do you agree with that?

    Policy-wise, we could practice income redistribution, which strictly shrinks the realms of options of rich people, and strictly expands the realms of options of poor people. Do you agree that that is one of the effects?

    Taking 50K from a person earning a million dollars and giving 1K apiece to 50 poor people, will take away the the rich person's option of doing something with the 50K, and give the poor people the option to do things with the 1K.

    Now, the decision to redistribute or not depends on your criteria. Mine is, roughly, "maximize aggregate happiness." You could also say "maximize aggregate freedom," where I am explicitly defining "freedom" as "the ability to do things." (If you could zap someone and make them smarter, you'd increase their freedom). If you disagree with the definition, just ignore the word "freedom." (And yeah, research does suggest that "happiness" may not always increase with "choices." I'm just ignoring that and saying choices are always good.)

    I assume that, since poor people are in a more exigent situation (and thus have significantly smaller realms of possibility), expanding their realms of options has a greater effect on aggregate happiness than preserving rich people's realms of options. Do you disagree?

    And since aggregate happiness is roughly the goal, we should redistribute.

    I know I didn't mention status at all, but I don't think Ezra is really talking about that anyway, like I said.
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