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Veblen Goods

When Higher Prices Mean Higher Demand

"Conspicuous consumption of valuable goods is a means of reputability to the gentleman of leisure." — Thorstein Veblen, The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899)

In 1899, during America's Gilded Age of robber barons and extreme wealth inequality, economist Thorstein Veblen identified a paradox that defies basic economics:

The Veblen Paradox
For certain luxury goods, raising the price INCREASES demand.
The demand curve slopes upward, not downward.
Maison Veblen
Purveyors of Status Since 1899
👜
The Aristocrat Handbag
RETAIL PRICE
$5,000
$500 $50,000
Social Desirability 67%
Coveted
📊 Market Position: Luxury Brand

Normal Goods

Demand Price

↑ Price = ↓ Demand

🍎 Apples
☕ Coffee
👕 Basic Clothing

Veblen Goods

Demand Price

↑ Price = ↑ Demand

👜 Hermès Birkin
⌚ Patek Philippe
🚗 Rolls-Royce

🧠 Why Does This Happen?

🏆
Status Signaling
The high price IS the product. It signals wealth to others.
🚫
Exclusivity
If everyone could afford it, it wouldn't signal status.
🪞
Pecuniary Emulation
We imitate the consumption patterns of those above us.
🎭
Social Identity
Luxury goods place us in a desired social class.

🏛️ The Gilded Age Context (1870-1900)

🎩
Rockefeller
🎩
Carnegie
🎩
Vanderbilt
🎩
Morgan

Veblen witnessed America's first billionaires display wealth through mansions, yachts, and European art.
He called it "conspicuous waste"—consumption for display rather than utility.

Modern Veblen Goods

👜
Hermès Birkin
$10K-$500K
Rolex
Waitlist = Status
🚗
Ferrari
Invite-only access
🍾
Dom Pérignon
$200+ champagne
💎
Diamonds
"Forever" marketing
📱
Vertu Phones
$10K+ for phone
$362B
Global luxury market (2024)
7-10%
Annual growth rate
125
Years since Veblen

The Uncomfortable Truth

Veblen showed that humans are not the rational utility-maximizers that classical economics assumes.

We don't just buy products for their function—we buy them for their meaning.

A $50,000 bag does the same job as a $50 one. But only one signals that you've arrived.