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When it comes to fun shopping, people prefer to use plastic money Consumers purchase interesting products with credit and boring products with cash, a new study, including an Indian-origin researcher, has revealed. People who pay cash focus on different aspects of products than people who use credit cards, the report said. "Our research suggests that, when it comes to product evaluation, beauty truly lies in the eyes of the cardholder," authors Promothesh Chatterjee (University of Kansas) and Randall L. Rose (University of South Carolina) wrote. Although previous research has already proven that consumers are willing to pay more when they use credit cards instead of cash, the authors found that consumer perception of products is also affected when thinking about paying with one or the other. In the experiments, the authors induced people to think about either credit cards or cash as means of payment. They then examined the ways participants evaluated different product attributes. "We find that people attend more to product benefits when concepts related to credit cards are highlighted in their minds as compared to cash concepts," the authors wrote. "On the other hand, when cash concepts are primed, people tend to focus more on product costs (monetary and non-monetary). The authors noted that consumers develop mental associations about credit cards and cash from early ages. Credit card advertising, for example, links the use of credit cards with highly desirable products and lifestyles and immediate gratification, while cash, on the other hand, is closely linked to the pain of payment. "While convenient, credit cards do not encourage consumers to deliberate over their spending behavior," they wrote. "Our findings
suggest that marketers may be affecting not just the amount of money
consumers are willing to spend but also the nature of the goods and
services that find their way into consumers’ market baskets."
"The effects of credit cards go far beyond increasing consumer
spending power and shifting consumption from the future to the
present; fundamental product perceptions are affected as well,"
they added. The study was published in the Journal of Consumer
Research. — ANI
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