학술논문

Champagne taste, beer budget: The new poor's incongruent capital and consumption.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Consumer Culture. Feb2020, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p23-42. 20p.
Subject
*LOW-income consumers
*CONSUMER culture theory
*SOCIAL classes
*EQUALITY
Language
ISSN
1469-5405
Abstract
This study examines the shopping preferences of "new poor" consumers who have incongruent capital: lower economic capital and higher noneconomic capital. The new poor exemplify consumers with ambiguous and fragmented identity; thus, they do not fit marketers' static categorization of consumer segments. In the marketplace, these consumers must compromise between their upper-class taste and lower-class earnings. Taking a Consumer Culture Theory approach to examine consumers' identity projects in social inequality, we conduct 20 interviews among self-defined new poor consumers in the United States and Taiwan to explore how their dynamic social class consciousness is reflected in everyday consumption. The findings suggest that new poor consumers perform "compromised ideal consumption" in which they strategically interpret and wield their remaining capital to signal social class differences, while employing adaptive and active capitalization acts to access goods that should have been beyond their price range. The findings illuminate how incongruent, devalued capital reproduces social stratification in the context of downward mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]