According to Chua, their research found that “people who were made to think about luxury prior to a decision-making task have a higher tendency to endorse self-interested decisions that might potentially harm others.” Their findings are detailed in the HBS working paper “The Devil Wears Prada? Effects of Exposure to Luxury Goods on Cognition and Decision Making” [PDF].

“Will the same business meeting reach different decisions when it is held at a luxury resort as opposed to a modest conference room?” the authors write. “Will CEOs who bequeath themselves expensive office facilities and luxurious corporate jets make different business decisions than those who do not? In this age of Wall Street excesses, these are pertinent questions that could further our understanding of why some [people] continue to place their own interests over others’, even in difficult economic times.”

The ‘Luxury Prime’: How Luxury Changes People — HBS Working Knowledge

I think the implicit concept here is “I like this standard of living. What do I need to do to maintain it?” and that leads to self-interested decision making.  Fascinating.

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