The
conclusion that cash discourages spending, and credit or gift cards
encourage it, arises from four studies that examined two factors in
purchasing behavior: when consumers part with their money (cash versus
credit) and the form of payment (cash, cash-like scrip, gift
certificate or credit card). The results build on growing evidence
that, as the authors wrote, "The more transparent the payment outflow,
the greater the aversion to spending, or higher the 'pain of paying.'"
Cash is viewed as the most transparent form of payment.
Priya
Raghubir, PhD, of the Stern School of Business at New York University,
and Joydeep Srivastava, PhD, of the Robert H. Smith School of Business
at the University of Maryland, College Park, asked participants to read
various buying scenarios and answer questions about how much would they
spend using cash versus various cash equivalents.
In the first
study, 114 participants estimated how much they would pay using various
payment forms for a vividly described restaurant meal. The results
showed that "People are willing to spend (or pay) more when they use a
credit card than when using cash," the authors wrote. They attributed
the difference in spending behavior to the way cash can reinforce the
pain of paying.
The authors also found that people who said they were more thoughtful in real life about amounts charged to credit spent less when using a fictitious card.
In the second study, researchers highlighted the future pain of paying by having 57 participants estimate food expenses for an imaginary Thanksgiving dinner item by item, rather than a holistic total. When they did this, the cash-credit spending gap closed. When people confronted the detailed reality of expenses, it no longer mattered whether they used cash or something else.
The next two studies examined spending differences relative to mode, not timing. In Study 3, 28 participants given a detailed shopping list were found to spend more when they used a $50 gift certificate instead of $50 cash.
In Study 4, 130 participants were given $1 cash or a $1 "gift certificate" to buy candy. At first, they were more willing to spend the gift certificate than the cash. After holding the gift certificate in their wallets for an hour, thus treating it like cash, they became less likely to spend it -- a sign that they had assimilated its value. When researchers again highlighted the difference in transparency between cash and gift certificates, people reverted to their original behavior.
Thus, it appears that simple manipulations can alter spending behavior, and that consumer warnings about the deceptive ease of non-cash payments have merit. "The studies suggest that less transparent payment forms tend to be treated like [play] money and are hence more easily spent (or parted with)," the authors wrote. "Treating nonlegal tender as play money leads to overspending that authorities can warn consumers about."
Reference
Raghubir, P. & Srivastava, J. (2008). Monopoly Money: The Effect of Payment Coupling and Form on Spending Behavior. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, Vol. 14, No 3.
Source: EurekAlert (Press Release)
