Communicating identity: how the symbolic meaning of goods creates different market types

IF 1.6 Q2 ECONOMICS REVIEW OF SOCIAL ECONOMY Pub Date : 2022-01-03 DOI:10.1080/00346764.2021.2019822
Carolina Dalla Chiesa, Erwin Dekker
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Abstract

This paper argues that the different symbolic meanings of goods give rise to three institutionally different market types. We start from the realization that consumption has symbolic meaning, which individuals use to communicate and construct their identity to their social networks. We argue that firm behavior (including size, pricing and marketing strategies) must be congruent with the symbolic meaning of goods. We distinguish between two stylized meanings of goods, status and taste, which we derive from the socio-anthropological literature on consumption. We argue that these different meanings, articulated by consumers to communicate their identity, give rise to three ideal-typical market types. We present the institutional differences between these market types as well as the implications for firm behavior and demonstrate how firm behavior and marketing strategies differs significantly from markets in which the symbolic meaning of goods is relatively unimportant. We use the recent transformation of the beer market by the craft-beer producers, to illustrate our theory.

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传播身份:商品的象征意义如何创造不同的市场类型
本文认为,商品的不同象征意义导致了三种制度上不同的市场类型。我们首先认识到,消费具有象征意义,个体利用它与自己的社会网络进行沟通,构建自己的身份。我们认为企业行为(包括规模、定价和营销策略)必须与商品的象征意义一致。我们区分了商品的两种风格化含义,地位和品味,这是我们从消费的社会人类学文献中得出的。我们认为,这些不同的含义,通过消费者表达他们的身份,产生了三种理想的典型市场类型。我们展示了这些市场类型之间的制度差异以及对企业行为的影响,并展示了企业行为和营销策略与商品的象征意义相对不重要的市场有何显著不同。我们用精酿啤酒生产商最近对啤酒市场的转变来说明我们的理论。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
10.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: For over sixty-five years, the Review of Social Economy has published high-quality peer-reviewed work on the many relationships between social values and economics. The field of social economics discusses how the economy and social justice relate, and what this implies for economic theory and policy. Papers published range from conceptual work on aligning economic institutions and policies with given ethical principles, to theoretical representations of individual behaviour that allow for both self-interested and "pro-social" motives, and to original empirical work on persistent social issues such as poverty, inequality, and discrimination.
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