从福利到精致:收入条件如何影响对美容消费的道德感知

From Welfare to Well-Groomed: How Income Conditions Influence Moral Perception of Beauty Consumption

Journal of Business Ethics · 2026
被引 0
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

通过八项实验发现,收入条件影响人们对美容消费的道德评判:福利领取者购买美容产品被认为更不道德,而中等收入者则无此效应,这种偏见源于感知的应得性差异。

Abstract

While consumers across all income conditions participate in beauty consumption, how people view such consumption made by consumers from different income conditions remains unclear. Across eight experiments (including two supplementary studies), this research identifies income condition as a key factor shaping moral judgments of beauty consumption. Specifically, we found that a consumer’s income condition and consumption choice on beauty interactively shape how others evaluate his or her perceived morality, such that welfare recipients are judged as less moral when purchasing beauty products (vs. daily necessities), whereas no such effect emerges for middle-income earners. This effect is mediated by perceived deservingness, such that welfare recipients are viewed as less deserving of spending freedom than middle-income earners. Such evaluations are indirectly linked to reduced financial support to welfare recipients who engage in beauty consumption compared to those who do not. Furthermore, when welfare recipients’ beauty consumption is framed as driven by utilitarian (vs. hedonic) motives, they are perceived as more deserving and, in turn, more moral. Finally, debiasing interventions that increase perceived deservingness were shown to be effective in alleviating moral condemnation toward welfare recipients’ beauty consumption. Together, this research provides insights for consumers and beauty industry firms seeking to understand biases toward welfare recipients’ beauty spending and foster a more inclusive marketplace.

消费者行为道德判断收入不平等美容消费福利政策