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Materialism among adolescents in urban China

Kara Chan (Hong Kong Baptist University)
Hongxia Zhang (Peking University)
Iris Wang (Peking University)

Young Consumers

ISSN: 1747-3616

Article publication date: 1 March 2006

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Abstract

Looks at attitudes of Chinese adolescents to materialism, including the effect of age on materialism and the influence of family and peers. Outlines the values of Chinese culture: thrift, respect for parents, group orientation, social harmony, good manners, face, and academic achievement; these values could impact both positively and negatively on endorsement of materialistic values. Points out that parental expectations of their children’s material success have increased since the one child per family policy. Finds that older adolescents were more materialistic than younger ones, that more materialistic adolescents tended to communicate more with their peers and less with their parents, and that television (which now reaches 92 per cent of households) has no effect because the Chinese government’s strict rules about TV programmes’ content requires them to reflect traditional values.

Keywords

Citation

Chan, K., Zhang, H. and Wang, I. (2006), "Materialism among adolescents in urban China", Young Consumers, Vol. 7 No. 2, pp. 64-77. https://doi.org/10.1108/17473610610701510

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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