Speaking of Psychology - Encore - Tightwads and spendthrifts: How emotions drive our shopping behavior, with Scott Rick, PhD
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Does shopping bring you joy? Or do you feel a bit of pain and regret every time you have to make a purchase? Many of us will be shopping for gifts in the upcoming weeks—whether we enjoy it or not. S...cott Rick, PhD, of the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, discusses how our emotions drive our buying behaviors, why some people spend money so easily while others find it so difficult, whether “retail therapy” actually works, and why Black Friday sales are so irresistible. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Speaking of psychology is taking a Thanksgiving break this week, so we're rerunning an episode
from our archives. Back in 2021, at the beginning of the holiday shopping season, I talked to
University of Michigan professor Scott Rick about how emotions guide our shopping behavior
and why Black Friday sales are so irresistible. We hope you enjoy this episode from the archives,
and we'll be back with a new episode next week. Does shopping bring you joy? Or do you feel a bit of pain
or regret every time you have to make a purchase. Many of us will be shopping for gifts in the
coming weeks, whether we enjoy it or not. So today we're going to talk about the psychology of shopping.
How do our emotions drive our buying behaviors? Why do some people spend money so easily,
even when they shouldn't, while others find it difficult to splurge even when they can afford it?
Does buying a gift feel the same as buying something for yourself? Is retail therapy a real thing?
Can shopping boost your mood?
And why are Black Friday sales so irresistible?
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life.
I'm Kim Mills.
Our guest today is Dr. Scott Rick, an associate professor of marketing at the University of Michigan's
Ross School of Business.
His research focuses on understanding the emotional causes and consequences.
of consumer financial decision-making,
with a particular interest in the behavior
of tightwads and spendthrifts,
people who chronically spend more or less money
than they want to, or perhaps should.
The goal of his work is to understand
why consumers behave the way they do
and to develop interventions
to improve their decision-making and well-being.
He has published in journals dedicated
to marketing, psychology, management,
neuroscience, and economics.
And his research has been covered by many media outlets,
including the New York Times,
Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and NPR. Thank you for joining us, Dr. Rick.
Thank you so much for having me. Really happy to be here.
One of the things you're known for is developing the tightwad spendthrift scale. So let's start there.
We all know that some people spend money more easily than others, but you found there are real
brain and behavioral differences between tightwads and spendthrifts and that they're related
to an emotional experience called the pain of paying. Can you tell us more about
that research. Yeah. So that started just based on conversations. I'm personally a spendthrift,
raised by spendthrifts. And my advisor back in grad school, George Lowenstein, was a tightwad.
And I was finding a lot of people in my life seemed to be tightwads. They seem to have a lot of
distress when thinking about spending money. And that was kind of a strange thing to me that,
if anything, my distress came afterwards once I saw like the credit card bill or things.
like that. So yeah, we we did some stuff like have people shop while having their brain scan with
functional MRI. And we found some evidence consistent with this idea of a pain of pain that people
use feelings of distress as kind of the brakes on the car. So like the more kind of anxious or
uncomfortable I am when thinking about spending the money, the less likely I am to do it.
Now, some people have too much of that. That's the tight ones. And that could come from
lots of places, including maybe there was some financial distress earlier in life that they just can't shake later
when their objective financial situation improves.
And then there are those of us like spendthrifts who just don't have enough of it.
We don't think about spending as mathematically.
We're more focused on the present than the future.
So there are these kind of big differences.
And we developed a scale, a tight-wad spend-thrift scale, to measure this,
and figure out what it's different from.
For example, being a tightwad is very different than being a frugal person.
A frugal person, they love to save, and it's fun, and they enjoy it, and they're happy.
A tight wand just really dislikes spending, and they're not so happy, and they, you know,
they're not buying the gifts that they should for their partner, and they're not going on the vacations they should,
and they're walking around in shoes that hurt, even though they have the money to buy better shoes.
And, you know, spendthrifts aren't on cloud nine either.
They're often in debt and kind of kicking themselves for spending too much.
We do find there's this middle ground of unconflicted consumers who kind of have a reasonable
amount of pain when thinking about spending and they tend to be happiest.
So are most of us somewhere in that middle ground then where we're neither a tightwad nor a spendthrift?
Yeah, it depends on where you look.
But around 50 to 60 percent of the people we sample are in that big middle ground.
of the unconflicted consumer.
And then it's about equally shared on the extremes.
And it sounds like tightwads aren't really getting any pleasure out of, you know,
accumulating their money, right?
I mean, they just have so much pain spending it.
So that's the difference?
Yeah, it's kind of anxiety maintenance, just a way to kind of calm the fears of going into bankruptcy.
And when you listen to a lot of them kind of talk about their feelings and their thoughts,
a lot of them do have memories of real distress in the past.
And it's just hard to shake it once things get better.
This reaction, these feelings are cultivated over time.
And it's hard to switch it off, you know, like a light switch.
So I think for them, it kind of helps to manage the distress kind of holding onto money.
Are spending habits related to other aspects of people's personalities,
such as overall conscientiousness or extroversion?
Or is the tightwads band thrift trait just its own thing?
Yeah, no, it's related to things.
So tightwads are more guilt-prone.
They're a little more conscientious.
It's not kind of just conscientiousness.
They're not necessarily flossing more,
showing up to meetings on time more often.
But there's some relation there.
Yeah, and they tend to be a little more mathematical in their thinking.
They can't shake the idea of opportunity costs.
What am I giving up later?
They, you know, they really do interpret a price tag in terms of what I'm foregoing.
And, you know, I think they almost kind of blow that up a little bit.
Like, I'm foregoing, like, so much by spending now.
So, yeah, you can see, like, differences in their college majors.
There are some gender differences, too.
Women are a little more likely to be spendthrifts than men are.
But it's not just that.
It's a small relationship, but it's there.
You mentioned college majors.
How does that play?
So on the tightwad side, you tend to see more kind of engineering, mathematics, whereas on the spendthrift side, you tend to see more social work or social science.
But you might be thinking like, oh, well, how does gender relate to this?
We even find that within gender, you see these major differences.
So women who are tightwads are more likely to have majored in engineering and math and women who are spent thrifts are more likely to major in social work and things like that.
And so that's true for men as well.
And so, yeah, there is definitely a different thinking style.
And there's a lot of people who study emotion who say that there's no emotion without cognition.
It's all kind of connected.
And I think the thoughts and the feelings kind of, especially for tightwads, they kind of build on each other.
Kind of the distress brings to mind thoughts of what I'm giving up later, which makes you more distressed and it's a cycle.
So one thing people may be curious about is where these traits.
come from and how early they develop. And I know you've found evidence of them even in very young
children. Can you explain that? So we have developed a scale, a spin thrift type one scale for kids
age five to ten. And, you know, it's a very simplified thing, kind of which cartoon character
has feelings towards money that match what you have. And, you know, even there we get kind of a similar
looking distribution of scores as we see among adults, kind of a similar amount in the middle
and then you're two extremes. Yeah, so we're looking into how that might transfer from parents to
kids through conversation. So we bring these parent-child diads into the lab and have them talk
through money situations. And you do see some kind of telltale signs like a spendthrift parent might
be the kid might want to save and the spendthrift parent is like, well, are you sure?
Like, there's some cool stuff here.
I can definitely relate to that.
But again, you know, a lot of it does seem to date back, at least among adults, to these really formative times in their life when things were really good or really bad and they just can't get past it once things change later.
You know, it's been called sometimes a post-brokness stress disorder, like, you know, this idea that, you know, once broke and always broke in terms of your feelings, no matter what you're actually.
bank account looks like now. It's there from an early age. I think part of it is kind of the
internal wiring, kind of what your guilt-proneness, things like that, what you're born with,
what your parents instill, and then kind of just your financial reality as a kid.
It calls to mind, though, the marshmallow test with Walter Mitchell and kids who can delay
gratification. Is that part of what's going on here as well? I think it is part of that,
for sure. And tightwads are certainly better at that kind of thing. But we do find it's not
kind of a general patience that tightweds aren't necessarily patient in a lot of other domains.
It really does seem to be more specific to kind of how they think about parting with money.
But, you know, if I had to, if I was forced to kind of bet on who's better able to wait for the
second marshmallow, it would be the tightwad child, certainly. Yes. So you've looked at how money
and spending habits figure in relationships, romantic relationships. And you've found that people
actually tend to partner up with their opposite. The tightwads often marry spendthrifts and vice versa.
Why does that happen and how does it work out for these couples?
So there's a real clear pattern that you see in like sociology research of these patterns
of fatal attraction, that if there's something you don't like about yourself and then you see it in
someone else, that that tends to be kind of a real turnoff. It kind of repels you. It's this thing
that I'm self-conscious about and then I see someone else and it's just, ugh, it's enough when
it's just me. I can't have a second version of that in the house. And so, you know, at first,
it's really fun and exciting to find someone who doesn't have that issue that you dislike.
And we do find that tight ones and spendthrifts don't like being tight ones and spin thrift thrifts.
They're conflicted.
That's why we call the people in the middle unconflicted.
And so they tend to pair up more often than you would expect, more often than kind of a tightwad, tightwad couple or a spendthrift spendthrift couple.
And so that's fun at first.
That's great.
But as often happens with these fatal attractions, things get serious.
You have to spend a lot of time with this person and make a lot of big decisions and, you know, about where to move and how many kids to try for and that kind of thing.
We are very consistent with past research in finding that the more different they are over time,
the more and more they fight over money and wish they married someone else or just stayed single.
I don't think that has to be the case with all mismatched couples.
There are ways to, I think, manage those discussions and manage how money flows in the household.
But on average, the mismatched partners seem to have a pretty rocky go of it.
So how does some of those interventions work if you're in one of these,
mismatched relationships, can you fix it?
I think it's good to have discussions and realize, maybe even both take the scale, the
tightwad Spentthrift scale and figure out where we are and realize that it's not that I'm,
you know, if it's a Spentriff talking to a tight one partner, you know, just realize it's not
that I don't care about our future together.
It's, you know, that I'm blowing household money and I do care about our future.
It's just I have this quirk and, you know, let's try to find a way to work through it,
perhaps with our account structure like joint versus separate accounts.
How obvious do we want our spending to be to each other?
Do we both have to know everything right away?
Or can we have some private fun accounts?
And, you know, working with a financial counselor and or a financial therapist, I think can be a good thing.
Certainly financial therapy is becoming a more popular practice.
But, yeah, it can really be.
misinterpreted. You know, if I'm a spendthrift and my partner is a tight one and they get me a
really terrible gift, what, you don't love me? No, it's not that. You just are really reluctant
to spend money. But, you know, maybe my love language is gifts, but you can't spend the money. And so it can
be real confusing. But if I just know that, well, it's not a love issue. It's just how you use money,
then there's more understanding there. So yeah, just opening up the discussion,
understanding these tendencies and finding money flows and discussion tendencies that work for you as a couple.
But it sounds like sharing financial information is kind of important here.
Even if it's not everything, right?
I mean, you should share enough.
Enough, yes.
I'm all about openness, but I don't know about kind of 100% immediate and active disclosure of all purchases.
I think you can't keep some things to yourself.
And yeah, so a lot of people, for example, have this idea that, you know, the latte factor, like, oh, if you don't buy the latte at work, then you can save up enough money to buy a home and be fabulously rich and all that.
Some people really believe that.
And so if they do, maybe I don't want to tell them about the lattes I'm buying because it's just going to cause a fight.
And the lattes really don't matter that much in the grand scheme of things.
So, yeah, it's openness good.
but maybe there's room for discretion.
So you can hide the lattes, but it's a little harder to hide that red corvette.
Indeed.
So let's talk about gift giving for a minute, since that's a topic that's on listeners' minds right now.
And one perhaps surprising finding of yours is that spendthrifts seem to be at a disadvantage
when it comes to giving gifts to their loved ones.
Why is that?
Yeah, I think it's somewhat counterintuitive because you would think that
they would be best positioned to give the best gifts.
They're just willing to spend.
But the issue is, how do they signal that this is something different or special that I'm doing for you?
If I live with a spendthrift and I see them kind of splurging all day, every day,
and then they splurge on me for a gift, like, it's not anything special that they've done.
This is just your normal thing.
So it becomes hard to kind of signal through normal kind of consumerist, you know, capitalist means that I really do love you.
And so I think for the spendthrift, you've got to do something different.
You've got to, maybe it's an experience that you kind of carefully plan.
Maybe it's something you make.
But if it's just something else you pick up in your daily kind of splurging, that's no good.
it has to be a change of pace.
Well, let's talk about holiday shopping more generally.
Is there any research on why Black Friday and other door buster type sales are so irresistible to people?
And do people feel less financial pain or emotional pain if they feel that they're getting a deal?
Sure, the framing of price.
This is a low price relative to something.
What it normally is or what it should be.
I mean, that does help reduce the pain of spending.
Scarcity is a big driver of behavior and desire.
We want scarce things.
You see that with young children, too, just making something appear scarce, and they just crave it.
So we want to get those scarce deals.
I do think part of it is just misinformation and not understanding the kind of universe of deals that are out there day to day.
There are some unique deals that you can get on something like Black Friday, but there are some good deals out there on other Fridays and just in general.
So we don't need like a stampede there.
It's just historically we know that this has been the case.
I think the landscape is very different now.
So I think it's just a lack of shopping expertise or information.
I would also add that it's just something to do.
You know, a lot of people are off work.
A lot of people are with their family, and if you've just kind of gone through Thanksgiving with them, you might need some air, so to speak.
So it's a way to kind of step away from too much family time, I would say.
A little goes a long way sometimes.
Well, that kind of raises a question then about online shopping.
You seem to be intimating that there are bargains out there every day.
So do people behave differently when they shop online versus when they shop in person?
or are the same psychological factors in play?
Well, certainly, yeah, many of the same ones are in play,
but online shopping, it's just kind of adding fuel to the fire.
It's just it can be so effortless to pay.
And especially if you have all your information saved already,
you know, just kind of a couple clicks and you're out of there.
You don't even know what happened.
It's just like you get carried away.
So, you know, if you want to control that,
you've got to put up speed bumps.
to erase your information, you know, don't have it, save it, log out, do like the Amazon,
you know, save for later or put it in my like list instead of buy now.
You know, try to enforce some kind of waiting period.
Whereas in the store, you have to like get in the car, you have to wait in line.
Like there are all these opportunities to second guess it.
But with a lot of online or mobile shopping, it's just so seamless.
But, you know, the retailers, the in-person retail,
are catching up. There are these Amazon Go stores where you just kind of swipe your phone when
you walk in and then you just pick up whatever you want and you just walk out. There's no checkout.
Yeah, that's a scary idea. Yeah. So, you know, retailers are really skilled kind of distracting you
from the moment of payment. Well, here in Ann Arbor, we have Vaughn Marr. It's like the Nordstrom
of the Midwest. And their sales associates are very nice, very chatty. And before I go to the
register, I have to think, well, what am I doing this weekend? Because I know they're going to ask. I can't
just say something lame, like, well, whatever my wife kind of thought of. I have to have a story.
And, you know, by the time I'm done, I have these bags, I don't even remember paying for it. It's just like,
what happened? So they're good at kind of taking your attention away from pulling out the wallet and how
much you actually spent. And then there are little tricks like you walk into Target and they've got these
little displays of sort of junky stuff.
They prime you, right?
So, oh, I'll just pick up one or two of these things.
And then pretty soon you're in the back of the store and your card is full.
Well, the target people, they're artists.
I mean, they, yeah, that's all about shopping momentum.
You want to get something in the cart.
You want to get that wallet opened right away.
And then people just get into kind of just a different mode, a different mindset.
So yeah, you've got to break the seal as soon as they walk in.
And then they've got those big baskets, right?
which, you know, oh, I'll get this comforter because there's plenty of room in here.
The baskets are very accommodating, yes.
I've never had one with a squeaky wheel either.
It's just smooth sailing.
So let's talk about gifts again for a minute.
Is buying a gift the same as buying something for yourself in terms of the emotions that you experience?
And are you more or less likely to experience the pain of paying when you're buying somebody a gift?
All the evidence we have does suggest that it's less painful.
to buy the gift, but there are other emotions that could be in play, like anxiety.
Will they like it?
What will they think?
It could be a much more stressful experience.
It's just more charged.
There's anxiety, but there's joy.
And we do find that tightwads look less like tightwads when they're buying gifts.
What we were saying earlier about the spendthrift buying gifts, I think the tightwads are in a real nice position.
Like if they're normally buying cheap things and then you buy something really fancy for me,
I'm like, oh my gosh, I know this was hard for you.
Or, you know, given how you normally spend, this was a big change for you.
That's amazing.
I'm actually not sure that's true because if the tightwads don't experience pain when they're buying the gift, then they're kind of getting too much credit there.
So I think they're in a nice position as gift givers because they've set the expectations.
But yeah, it's just a very different process, much more kind of emotionally charged.
What about everyday purchases such as groceries or gas or necessities for tightwads?
and spendthrift is the emotional experience of making everyday purchase the same as when they buy
something frivolous or unusual.
Yeah.
So for things that are routine or necessary, the pain does seem to be muted or less influential
because these things are just kind of expected purchases.
You really do see the biggest differences between the two types on things that are optional,
things that make you think, like, do I need this?
How long will I like it?
So I wouldn't expect big differences in what they're spending on gas or milk or, you know, commodity kind of stuff.
But really, it's things that seem optional.
But of course, marketers are very skilled at framing optional things as necessities or investments.
You know, this is not a pleasurable massage.
This is an investment to kind of help your back feel better and you'll be a better parent and a better athlete or employee or whatever.
And that kind of framing, that can really work on tight.
once. If it's, oh, well, okay, I didn't think of it like that. But spendthrifts, they don't need that.
They're very skilled at viewing everything as an investment, even if it's just an investment and like,
oh, I'll have a cool story to tell. That's one thing we are good at. We're good at thinking of
reasons for purchasing. So the idea of retail therapy gets a bad rap, people using shopping to act as a
pick me up or to make themselves feel better after a breakup or a bad day. But you've done some
research that found that at least for some people, there is some truth to the idea of retail
therapy, that there's a benefit. Can you talk about that?
I've heard all the bad things about retail therapy and how it's foolish and a big waste
and it doesn't work. And, you know, as a spendthor, two studies, emotions and financial
decision making, that just did not sound right to me. It seemed inconsistent with what we
know about emotional experience. And in particular, the experience of sadness.
So there's a lot of work suggesting that sadness is associated with thoughts of, I'm not in control of my own destiny.
I am at the mercy of kind of external forces, the environment, random kind of chance.
There's also other work suggesting that making choices, especially kind of pleasurable choices, can increase your sense of control, the sense that you are the captain of your own.
destiny. I want this, not that. I'm in charge. And so we thought that when people are sad,
that the experience of saying, yes, this, know that, I'm making choices, that could kind of stop
those thoughts of, I'm not in control, I'm at the mercy of the environment. And we thought we could
interrupt that pattern of bad thoughts and bad feelings by having people make those choices.
And so that's what we did.
We did experiments where we made people sad.
We had them watch kind of terribly sad film clips.
And then we would have them do kind of shopping choices,
or we would still expose them the products,
but they wouldn't get to make a choice, just like brows.
I think browsing is also underrated, but it's not choosing.
And so the choosers showed that they got over their sadness faster than the non-chusers,
that by exercising this control over something, they were able to kind of get over it more quickly.
And it really does seem to be about the choosing.
It doesn't seem to be about I get to acquire some thing.
Even when it's hypothetical choices, they still got over their sadness more quickly.
I should say it doesn't work for anger.
We didn't find it works for anger.
Anger tends to be about other people.
I'm mad at you.
You've wronged me.
I can't.
I'm not sure I can shop that away.
if my boss is being mean to me.
Right, right.
I'm not going to buy a pair of shoes and feel better.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah, you might like the shoes,
but I think you're still going to have that anger.
But, yeah, sadness, that does seem to be affected,
helped by making these choices.
Of course, disclaimer.
Is this a long-term solution?
Is this something you should do at every kind of pang of sadness?
I'm not so sure.
And I don't think it needs to be, you know, an expensive thing.
found that, again, even for hypothetical choices. So, you know, give yourself a budget for this
kind of thing. This is a small budget. This is, you know, like a nice restaurant meal should be like
the max, I think, that we're dealing with. Because, you know, if you keep doing this and you get in
debts, and then that itself will make you sad, and we don't want that. But I think used judiciously,
shopping can be a nice remedy for sadness. Well, so what's next? What's next?
on your research agenda, what questions are you trying to answer now?
Looking into more deeply this idea of what is best for marriage, joint or separate accounts,
and for different kind of couples, including couples that make very different income.
You know, how do you manage those income differences?
There was a lot of old work suggesting that joint accounts are good for couples.
But that older work could not rule out the possibility that, well, maybe it's just happier
couples that chose the joint accounts.
Like we're, we really love each other, we're in it for the long haul, let's merge everything.
So what we did and what we're kind of writing up now, we did this field experiment with
engaged in newlywed couples who had separate accounts.
And we randomly assigned them to kind of keep it separate or make a joint account and just
use that or do whatever you want.
And we followed them for two years.
and what we found was that the couples that we kind of forced to do the joint account,
they were happiest two years later.
They were most seeing eye to eye on financial matters two years later.
And so this is at least among couples who were open to our experiment.
They were at least, I think, toying with the idea of maybe should we go joint and we just
going to force them to do it, just do it.
And it helped.
I don't think every couple should go joint.
there are some bad couples out there where things are kind of, you know, shaky, right?
Sure.
So maybe best to kind of, you know, keep one foot out the door, so to speak.
But yeah, so we're looking into some other situations in which joint accounts might help.
We're looking more into things like the post-brokness stress disorder that's been discussed,
kind of how those formative experiences of financial strife early in life can stick with you
and what can be done to kind of get people to understand.
understand, like, oh, I do have money now. I do have money to spend. Things are okay. I can kind of
shake those feelings of anxiety. Yeah. And of course, a lot of work on parents and kids still to be
done. Well, Dr. Rick, this has been really, really fascinating. I hope people have gotten some
good information regarding how they're managing their finances. And again, this has been really
interesting. I appreciate you taking the time today. Thank you so much.
If you'd like to find out where you fall on the tightwad spend-through scale, you can find a
link in the show notes on our website at www.combeatingof psychology.org. You can also find previous
episodes there, or go to Apple, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts, and please leave us a review.
If you have comments or ideas for future podcasts, you can email us at speaking of psychology
at APA.org. That's Speaking of Psychology, all one word, at APA.org.
Speaking of Psychology is produced by Lee Wynerman. Our sound editor is Chris Condiom.
Thank you for listening.
For the American Psychological Association, I'm Kim Mills.
