When Materialists Intend to Resist Consumption: The Moderating Role of Self-Control and Long-Term Orientation(当唯物主义者抵制消费主义:自我调节作用与其长期导向)

发布者:万旭发布时间:2017-07-03浏览次数:292

Abstract

Prior research indicated that resistance to consumption contributes to the achievement of sustainable development goals and is associated with higher well-being. We investigate conditions under which materialists intend to resist consumption. We find that by enhancing self-control and long-term orientation, the intention to resist consumption and the frugality scores of high- and low-materialism individuals increase. These increases are stronger for those who believe that possessions are a source of happiness, but not for those who believe that possessions signal success or for those who believe that acquiring possessions is a central goal in their daily lives. The findings suggest that individuals who believe that possessions are a source of happiness and who are led to feel more self-controlled and long-term oriented become inclined to resist consumption in the short-term to achieve materialistic aspirations in the long-term. Similar findings were not obtained for the other dimensions of materialism because these dimensions do not motivate one to save in the short-term. Overall, these studies demonstrate that the happiness dimension of materialism may also motivate resistance to consumption. Such findings have implications for sustainability, for public policy makers, and for business ethics.

Keywords

Resistance to consumption   Materialism   Self-control   Long-term orientation   Sustainability   Consumer well-being

来源https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10551-015-2792-0
Journal of Business Ethics   July 2017, Volume 143, Issue 3, pp 467–483