Agriculture (Nov 2022)

Lagging behind the Joneses: Relative Deprivation and Household Consumption in Rural China

  • Xiaodi Qin,
  • Haitao Wu,
  • Yifeng Xie,
  • Xiaofang Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture12111912
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 1912

Abstract

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Based on the Chinese Family Panel Studies (CFPS) 2010–2018, this article investigates how relative deprivation influences household consumption in rural China. High-dimensional fixed-effects (HDFE), the instrumental variable (IV), and causal mediation analysis (CMA) are leveraged to estimate the causal effect and mechanisms. Results show that relative deprivation reduces survival-oriented consumption of food, development-oriented consumption of transportation, telecommunication, and education, as well as enjoyment-oriented of durable goods, and increases survival-oriented consumption of residence and development-oriented consumption of healthcare and medical services. Mechanism analysis indicates that relative deprivation decreases household consumption through the anticipated effect and increases it through a cognitive trap effect. On the whole, the anticipated effect prevails over the cognitive trap effect.

Keywords