Published June 20, 2013 | Version v1
Conference paper

Modeling Luxury Consumption: An Inter-Income Classes Study of Demand Dynamics and Social Behaviors

Description

We start from the observation that theoretical studies of luxury consumption are relatively rare in the economic analysis. In fact, while homothetic preferences simply cannot address the issue of luxury consumption, the use of non-homothetic preferences is restricted, at least in standard models, by the absence of consensus about the nature of luxury goods. Using the agent-based computational economics methodology, we, therefore, choose to dene a luxurious item by its ability to display social statute. We, rst, put our analysis in perspective via a short revue of the main contributions about consumption behavior in social context. Through this revue, we identify a few social phenomenons involved in the formation of individual preferences: imitation, diferentiation and innovation. Second, building on these simple social behaviors, we develop a model of luxury preference formation, in which preferences evolve endogenously. Third, we explore the emerging properties of the model, especially, under which conditions we observe a specialization of consumption by social classes. Finally we analyzes the impact of "Veblen eect" on consumption behaviors.

Abstract

International audience

Additional details

Created:
February 28, 2023
Modified:
November 30, 2023