It is not that often I get excited about a discussion (even though, I love research and surveys) but this article reproduced from the London Evening Standard by Phillip Delves Broughton, I found so fascinating had to share and get your opinion on the study.
Why should it matter whether you buy real designer sunglasses or fake ones? The designer may be upset because he or she is being ripped off. But then you console yourself. They're only sunglasses. It's all fun. Who cares? It's not as though Stella McCartney's heading to the poor house any time soon.
It's the same with bags. Do you shell out hundreds of pounds for the real thing or spend a fraction of that on a decent-looking fake, which may fall to pieces in the rain but does the job? But what is the job? Is it to do what sunglasses and bags are supposed to do, shield your eyes and hold your things? Or are fake designer items actually meant to signal to others that you are better than in fact you are?
Academic researchers have concluded that people buy fake products in order to tell themselves and others that they are better than they are. Buying a fake is a shortcut to fooling yourself and others that you are rich and have good taste. Even people who claim to be buying fakes for a laugh are in fact hoping that they will appear more affluent.
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Three American researchers, Francesca Gino, Michael Norton and Dan Ariely, ran a series of tests on a group of 85 female university students to examine the behavioural effects of wearing fake products.
In the first tests, they were all given a pair of real Chloe sunglasses but half of them were told their glasses were knock-offs. They were then all given a series of tasks to test their honesty. In one test, they were given a set of mathematical problems to complete in five minutes and asked to record their own score on a separate piece of paper. They would receive 50 cents for each correct answer.
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Those who thought they were wearing counterfeit sunglasses considered people they knew to be more dishonest, were more distrustful of common excuses and thought the characters in the scenario much more likely to behave dishonestly.
A final experiment tested the subjects' feelings of authenticity, measured by feelings of alienation from themselves. They were asked to what extent, on a scale of one to seven, they agreed with the statements: “Right now, I don't know how I really feel inside”; “Right now, I feel as though I don't know myself very well”; “Right now, I feel out of touch with the real me'; and “Right now, I feel alienated from myself.”
Higher scores indicated higher levels of self-alienation. The students who thought they were wearing fakes were on average one point on the scale more self-alienated than those who thought they had the real thing.
The researchers' depressing conclusion was that wearing fakes is not just bad for the wearer, but also for broader society as it leads to higher levels of mistrust. Whatever you think you are saving by buying a knock-off at a fraction of the cost of the real item, you pay for with your morality. It's great news for the fashion companies, which are constantly battling the knock-offs, and bad news for anyone who thought those fakes were fooling anyone. This is the most comprehensive research I have seen, would you agree or disagree with results?
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The researchers' depressing conclusion was that wearing fakes is not just bad for the wearer, but also for broader society as it leads to higher levels of mistrust. Whatever you think you are saving by buying a knock-off at a fraction of the cost of the real item, you pay for with your morality. It's great news for the fashion companies, which are constantly battling the knock-offs, and bad news for anyone who thought those fakes were fooling anyone. This is the most comprehensive research I have seen, would you agree or disagree with results?
Don't you just love it? What's your take? Have your say?
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