Deck 16: Culture and Cross-Cultural Variations in Consumer Behaviour

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Question
Which of the following is not an achievement-based status dimension?

A) occupation
B) age
C) income
D) education
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Question
Occupation is the most widely used single-item index in marketing studies.
Question
The lower, or working, class accounts for over half of the Australian population.
Question
For a social class to be exhaustive it is necessary that:

A) a rule is devised for each class that will include or exclude any particular individual.
B) the classes are arrayed in terms of some criteria.
C) an individual belongs to only one class.
D) every individual in the system fits into some class.
Question
Warner's index uses occupation, income level, house type and dwelling area as key socioeconomic indicators.
Question
Education has served as the primary path for upward social mobility.
Question
For a social class to be bounded it is necessary that:

A) a rule is devised for each class that will include or exclude any particular individual.
B) the classes are arrayed in terms of some criteria.
C) an individual belongs to only one class.
D) every individual in the system fits into some class.
Question
For a social class to be influential there must be behavioural variations within a class.
Question
The social-class system is defined as the arbitrary division of society into permanent, heterogeneous groups with respect to social power.
Question
The more consistent an individual is on all status dimensions:

A) the lesser the degree of status crystallisation for the individual.
B) the greater the degree of status crystallisation for the individual.
C) there is no difference in the degree of status crystallisation.
D) the more that individual will earn.
Question
For a social class to be mutually exclusive it is necessary that:

A) a rule is devised for each class that will include or exclude any particular individual.
B) the classes are arrayed in terms of some criteria.
C) an individual belongs to only one class.
D) every individual in the system fits into some class.
Question
For a social class to be ordered individuals can only belong to a single social class.
Question
The functional approach to social class categorisation is based on:

A) occupational role, income and living conditions.
B) the status of an individual's peer and reference groups.
C) an individual's status in a community.
D) the dollar value of the house an individual lives in.
Question
For a social class to be bounded there must be clear breaks between each social class.
Question
For a social-class system to exist in a society the classes must meet all of the following criteria except:

A) They must be specified.
B) They must be ordered.
C) They must be mutually exclusive.
D) They must be bounded.
Question
Warner's system is based on socioeconomic factors.
Question
Status crystallisation involves:

A) the extent to which one is a 'star' on one or more status dimensions.
B) the degree of consistency an individual has across all the status dimensions.
C) the degree to which an individual's status is visible to others.
D) the degree to which one's apparent status exceeds one's actual status.
Question
The weighting system in the Hollingshead index is (7 x occupational score) + (4 x education score).
Question
A social-class system is defined as:

A) the division of a society into relatively permanent and heterogeneous groups with respect to attitudes, values and lifestyles.
B) the hierarchical division of society into relatively permanent groups.
C) the hierarchical division of a society into relatively homogeneous groups with respect to attitudes, values and lifestyles.
D) the arbitrary division of society into permanent, heterogeneous groups with respect to social power.
Question
A reputational approach to social class structure:

A) focuses on occupational role, income level, living conditions and identification with a possibly disadvantaged ethnic or racial group.
B) is designed to reflect popular imagery and observation of how people interact with one another.
C) pays more attention to capitalist ownership and to occupational division of labour as defining variables.
D) includes the Gilbert-Kahl social class structure.
Question
Higher social classes use credit cards for convenience while lower classes tend to use them for instalment purchases. This illustrates that:

A) different purchase motivations for the same product may exist within social strata.
B) different purchase motivations for the same product may exist between social strata.
C) purchase motivations vary according with product category.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
Question
In using social stratification to develop marketing strategy, the following steps should be followed:

A) 1. Make marketing mix decisions; 2. Target social strata; 3. Relate status variables to product consumption; 4. Develop product position.
B) 1. Target social strata; 2. Relate status variables to product consumption; 3. Make marketing mix decisions; 4. Develop product position.
C) 1. Relate status variables to product consumption; 2. Target social strata; 3. Develop product position; 4. Make marketing mix decisions.
D) 1. Relate status variables to product consumption; 2. Make marketing mix decisions; 3. Develop product position; 4. Target social strata.
Question
The relationship of a household's total income to the median income of other households in the same occupation class is known as:

A) Hollingshead's two-factor index.
B) Carmen's Index.
C) relative occupational class income.
D) Warner's Relative Prestige Index.
Question
Relative occupational class income is:

A) the relationship of a household's total income to the median income of other households in the same occupational class.
B) the basis of the Hollingshead two-factor index.
C) the basis of the Duncan Socioeconomic Index.
D) the basis of the NORC Index.
Question
Broom developed a status scale for Australian occupations by doing all of the following except:

A) weighting income by occupation.
B) asking people to rank the prestige of certain occupations.
C) reviewing how age, education and other variables contribute to ranks of prestige.
D) estimating composite status scores for all occupations based on prestige ranks by occupation.
Question
A major problem with multi-item indexes compared to single-item indexes is:

A) the difficulty of computing the individual scores.
B) overall status may mask useful associations between individual status dimensions and the consumption process for particular products.
C) there are no major problems as the multi-item index is generally superior to the single-item index.
D) multi-item indexes are not as accurate as single-item indexes in predicting an individual's overall community standing.
Question
Which of the following is not one of the most common single-item indices?

A) income
B) type of residence
C) education
D) occupation
Question
Social class affects all of the following except:

A) consumers' evaluative processes.
B) consumers' willingness to learn about products.
C) the number and type of attributes that may apply in a purchase decision.
D) the specific threshold that may apply in a purchase decision.
Question
The primary path, in our culture, for upward social mobility is:

A) occupation.
B) income.
C) education.
D) residence.
Question
The working class is the ____________ in the Coleman-Rainwater social-class system.

A) largest category
B) same size as the middle class
C) second largest, just after the middle class
D) same size as the lower class
Question
In the Coleman-Rainwater social class structure the 'new rich' refers to the:

A) upper-middle class.
B) middle class.
C) upper-upper class.
D) lower-upper class.
Question
The weighting system in the Hollingshead index is:

A) (7 x occupational score) + (4 x education score)
B) (4 x occupational score) + (7 x education score)
C) (5 x occupational score) + (4 x education score)
D) (4 x occupational score) + (5 x education score)
Question
Which of the following is not an ascribed status dimension?

A) race
B) age
C) gender
D) All of the given answers are ascribed status dimensions.
Question
Regarding social class:

A) Many older individuals are quite content with their social standing.
B) Many younger people are quite content with their social standing.
C) Many teenagers aspire simply to the lifestyle of their parents.
D) All of the given answers are correct.
Question
Knowing the subjective discretionary income of a consumer is important for marketers because:

A) it is useful in predicting the use of financial services.
B) for some product categories it can predict purchases that family income cannot.
C) it adds predictive power to total family income.
D) All of the given answers are correct.
Question
Warner's Index of Status Characteristics is made up of:

A) occupation, source of income, house type and dwelling area.
B) education, occupation and income.
C) education, house type, income and occupation.
D) occupation, dwelling area, education and income.
Question
The scale that fully accounts for the reality of dual sources of status for a household:

A) is the Broom scale.
B) is the Daniel scale.
C) is yet to be developed.
D) is the Hollingshead Index of Social Position.
Question
Compared to multi-item indexes, single-item indexes are:

A) more difficult to utilise.
B) less accurate at predicting an individual's overall position in a community.
C) more accurate at predicting an individual's overall position in a community.
D) not as useful in applied studies.
Question
Which of the following is the most widely used basis for single-item indexes in marketing studies?

A) income
B) type of residence
C) education
D) occupation
Question
The Hollingshead Index of Social Position uses:

A) income and education.
B) income and occupation.
C) education and occupation.
D) income and residence type.
Question
According to McGregor all of the following are true of working-class Australians except:

A) They form a homogeneous class.
B) They speak in different accents relative to other classes.
C) They work different hours relative to other classes.
D) They vote for different parties relative to other classes.
Question
Conspicuous consumption:

A) can enable consumers to call the attention of others whom they wish to impress.
B) is the process of consuming products privately.
C) is the process of consuming products endorsed by celebrities.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
Question
Using income as a measure of status poses a number of measurement problems. Basically, the researcher must decide which income to measure. This involves such decisions as:

A) individual or family income.
B) income before or after taxes.
C) salary or total income.
D) all of the given answers.
Question
Define masstige and illustrate how this may link to social class.
Question
According to Daniel all of the following are true of Australians except:

A) The most prestigious occupation is that of scientist.
B) Occupational prestige remains the most powerful single indicator of the power and privilege any individual or group may command.
C) The status of occupations reflects the class structure.
D) The governing elite in society comes from the upper class.
Question
The underclass constitutes:

A) chronically disadvantaged groups outside the traditional class structure.
B) those under the working class.
C) the unemployed, homeless, sick and poverty-stricken members of society.
D) all of the given answers.
Question
The relationships that help us to develop the taste preferences we use to make consumption decisions are defined by Bourdieu as:

A) social capital.
B) social networks.
C) extended family.
D) social class.
Question
The use of social class as an explanatory consumer behaviour variable has been heavily influenced by two studies, both of which have developed a multiple-item index to measure social class. These studies are called:

A) Hollingshead Index of Social Position and Warner Bros. Index of Status Characteristics.
B) Hollingshead Index of Social Position and Harris's Index of Status Characteristics.
C) Hollingshead Index of Social Position and Warner's Index of Status Characteristics.
D) none of the given answers.
Question
Traditional views of social class assume that for a social-class system to exist in a society the individual classes must meet five criteria. They must be:

A) bounded, ordered, mutually exclusive, inclusive and influential.
B) bounded, ordered, mutually exclusive, exhaustive and status system.
C) bounded, ordered, mutually exclusive, exhaustive and influential.
D) bounded, ordered, structured, exhaustive and influential.
Question
In the text, when discussing social class Holt believes that:

A) the upper class will always be interested in how a purchase might improve their social standing.
B) the higher class individuals value certain products for the instrumental opportunity they provide to demonstrate high levels of cultural knowledge, whereas those in the lower classes value these products' functional or terminal benefits.
C) higher class individuals value certain products based on how these fulfil their ego needs whereas those in the lower class are more interested in meeting their lower order needs.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
Question
What does the concept of relative occupational class income refer to? Give an example of how this may affect consumer behaviour.
Question
Provide examples of indicators used in the Hollingshead Index of Social Position.
Question
According to your text, which are some of the issues and assumptions marketers face in using social class?

A) Marketers tend to assume that all consumers desire upward social mobility.
B) Marketers tend to assume all consumers want to emulate the behaviours and consumption patterns of those above them in the social-class system.
C) Marketers tend to assume consumers always want to be exposed to advertising.
D) Marketers tend to assume that all consumers desire upward social mobility and that all consumers want to emulate the behaviours and consumption patterns of those above them in the social-class system.
Question
According to your text, in 2005 occupations of the employed in Australia and New Zealand reflect:

A) 'professionals' as the largest occupational group in Australia.
B) service and sales workers as the smallest occupational group in New Zealand.
C) advanced clerical and service workers as the largest occupational group in Australia.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
Question
Which concept addresses the question 'Will an individual with high status based on one dimension have high status based on the other dimensions?'

A) masstige
B) status stratification
C) status crystallisation
D) status consistency
Question
Which of the following is not a category listed in the ANZSCO classification?

A) managers
B) educators
C) community and personal service workers
D) clerical and administrative workers
Question
Marketers often use high social status products and services to attract members of the middle class. This is called an:

A) aspiring-push strategy.
B) aspiring-pull strategy.
C) upward-pull strategy.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
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Deck 16: Culture and Cross-Cultural Variations in Consumer Behaviour
1
Which of the following is not an achievement-based status dimension?

A) occupation
B) age
C) income
D) education
B
2
Occupation is the most widely used single-item index in marketing studies.
True
3
The lower, or working, class accounts for over half of the Australian population.
False
4
For a social class to be exhaustive it is necessary that:

A) a rule is devised for each class that will include or exclude any particular individual.
B) the classes are arrayed in terms of some criteria.
C) an individual belongs to only one class.
D) every individual in the system fits into some class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
5
Warner's index uses occupation, income level, house type and dwelling area as key socioeconomic indicators.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Education has served as the primary path for upward social mobility.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
For a social class to be bounded it is necessary that:

A) a rule is devised for each class that will include or exclude any particular individual.
B) the classes are arrayed in terms of some criteria.
C) an individual belongs to only one class.
D) every individual in the system fits into some class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
For a social class to be influential there must be behavioural variations within a class.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The social-class system is defined as the arbitrary division of society into permanent, heterogeneous groups with respect to social power.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The more consistent an individual is on all status dimensions:

A) the lesser the degree of status crystallisation for the individual.
B) the greater the degree of status crystallisation for the individual.
C) there is no difference in the degree of status crystallisation.
D) the more that individual will earn.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
For a social class to be mutually exclusive it is necessary that:

A) a rule is devised for each class that will include or exclude any particular individual.
B) the classes are arrayed in terms of some criteria.
C) an individual belongs to only one class.
D) every individual in the system fits into some class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
For a social class to be ordered individuals can only belong to a single social class.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
The functional approach to social class categorisation is based on:

A) occupational role, income and living conditions.
B) the status of an individual's peer and reference groups.
C) an individual's status in a community.
D) the dollar value of the house an individual lives in.
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Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
For a social class to be bounded there must be clear breaks between each social class.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
For a social-class system to exist in a society the classes must meet all of the following criteria except:

A) They must be specified.
B) They must be ordered.
C) They must be mutually exclusive.
D) They must be bounded.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Warner's system is based on socioeconomic factors.
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k this deck
17
Status crystallisation involves:

A) the extent to which one is a 'star' on one or more status dimensions.
B) the degree of consistency an individual has across all the status dimensions.
C) the degree to which an individual's status is visible to others.
D) the degree to which one's apparent status exceeds one's actual status.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
18
The weighting system in the Hollingshead index is (7 x occupational score) + (4 x education score).
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
A social-class system is defined as:

A) the division of a society into relatively permanent and heterogeneous groups with respect to attitudes, values and lifestyles.
B) the hierarchical division of society into relatively permanent groups.
C) the hierarchical division of a society into relatively homogeneous groups with respect to attitudes, values and lifestyles.
D) the arbitrary division of society into permanent, heterogeneous groups with respect to social power.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
A reputational approach to social class structure:

A) focuses on occupational role, income level, living conditions and identification with a possibly disadvantaged ethnic or racial group.
B) is designed to reflect popular imagery and observation of how people interact with one another.
C) pays more attention to capitalist ownership and to occupational division of labour as defining variables.
D) includes the Gilbert-Kahl social class structure.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Higher social classes use credit cards for convenience while lower classes tend to use them for instalment purchases. This illustrates that:

A) different purchase motivations for the same product may exist within social strata.
B) different purchase motivations for the same product may exist between social strata.
C) purchase motivations vary according with product category.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
In using social stratification to develop marketing strategy, the following steps should be followed:

A) 1. Make marketing mix decisions; 2. Target social strata; 3. Relate status variables to product consumption; 4. Develop product position.
B) 1. Target social strata; 2. Relate status variables to product consumption; 3. Make marketing mix decisions; 4. Develop product position.
C) 1. Relate status variables to product consumption; 2. Target social strata; 3. Develop product position; 4. Make marketing mix decisions.
D) 1. Relate status variables to product consumption; 2. Make marketing mix decisions; 3. Develop product position; 4. Target social strata.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
The relationship of a household's total income to the median income of other households in the same occupation class is known as:

A) Hollingshead's two-factor index.
B) Carmen's Index.
C) relative occupational class income.
D) Warner's Relative Prestige Index.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Relative occupational class income is:

A) the relationship of a household's total income to the median income of other households in the same occupational class.
B) the basis of the Hollingshead two-factor index.
C) the basis of the Duncan Socioeconomic Index.
D) the basis of the NORC Index.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Broom developed a status scale for Australian occupations by doing all of the following except:

A) weighting income by occupation.
B) asking people to rank the prestige of certain occupations.
C) reviewing how age, education and other variables contribute to ranks of prestige.
D) estimating composite status scores for all occupations based on prestige ranks by occupation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
A major problem with multi-item indexes compared to single-item indexes is:

A) the difficulty of computing the individual scores.
B) overall status may mask useful associations between individual status dimensions and the consumption process for particular products.
C) there are no major problems as the multi-item index is generally superior to the single-item index.
D) multi-item indexes are not as accurate as single-item indexes in predicting an individual's overall community standing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which of the following is not one of the most common single-item indices?

A) income
B) type of residence
C) education
D) occupation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Social class affects all of the following except:

A) consumers' evaluative processes.
B) consumers' willingness to learn about products.
C) the number and type of attributes that may apply in a purchase decision.
D) the specific threshold that may apply in a purchase decision.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
The primary path, in our culture, for upward social mobility is:

A) occupation.
B) income.
C) education.
D) residence.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The working class is the ____________ in the Coleman-Rainwater social-class system.

A) largest category
B) same size as the middle class
C) second largest, just after the middle class
D) same size as the lower class
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Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
In the Coleman-Rainwater social class structure the 'new rich' refers to the:

A) upper-middle class.
B) middle class.
C) upper-upper class.
D) lower-upper class.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The weighting system in the Hollingshead index is:

A) (7 x occupational score) + (4 x education score)
B) (4 x occupational score) + (7 x education score)
C) (5 x occupational score) + (4 x education score)
D) (4 x occupational score) + (5 x education score)
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Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Which of the following is not an ascribed status dimension?

A) race
B) age
C) gender
D) All of the given answers are ascribed status dimensions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Regarding social class:

A) Many older individuals are quite content with their social standing.
B) Many younger people are quite content with their social standing.
C) Many teenagers aspire simply to the lifestyle of their parents.
D) All of the given answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Knowing the subjective discretionary income of a consumer is important for marketers because:

A) it is useful in predicting the use of financial services.
B) for some product categories it can predict purchases that family income cannot.
C) it adds predictive power to total family income.
D) All of the given answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Warner's Index of Status Characteristics is made up of:

A) occupation, source of income, house type and dwelling area.
B) education, occupation and income.
C) education, house type, income and occupation.
D) occupation, dwelling area, education and income.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
The scale that fully accounts for the reality of dual sources of status for a household:

A) is the Broom scale.
B) is the Daniel scale.
C) is yet to be developed.
D) is the Hollingshead Index of Social Position.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Compared to multi-item indexes, single-item indexes are:

A) more difficult to utilise.
B) less accurate at predicting an individual's overall position in a community.
C) more accurate at predicting an individual's overall position in a community.
D) not as useful in applied studies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which of the following is the most widely used basis for single-item indexes in marketing studies?

A) income
B) type of residence
C) education
D) occupation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
The Hollingshead Index of Social Position uses:

A) income and education.
B) income and occupation.
C) education and occupation.
D) income and residence type.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
According to McGregor all of the following are true of working-class Australians except:

A) They form a homogeneous class.
B) They speak in different accents relative to other classes.
C) They work different hours relative to other classes.
D) They vote for different parties relative to other classes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Conspicuous consumption:

A) can enable consumers to call the attention of others whom they wish to impress.
B) is the process of consuming products privately.
C) is the process of consuming products endorsed by celebrities.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Using income as a measure of status poses a number of measurement problems. Basically, the researcher must decide which income to measure. This involves such decisions as:

A) individual or family income.
B) income before or after taxes.
C) salary or total income.
D) all of the given answers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Define masstige and illustrate how this may link to social class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
According to Daniel all of the following are true of Australians except:

A) The most prestigious occupation is that of scientist.
B) Occupational prestige remains the most powerful single indicator of the power and privilege any individual or group may command.
C) The status of occupations reflects the class structure.
D) The governing elite in society comes from the upper class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The underclass constitutes:

A) chronically disadvantaged groups outside the traditional class structure.
B) those under the working class.
C) the unemployed, homeless, sick and poverty-stricken members of society.
D) all of the given answers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The relationships that help us to develop the taste preferences we use to make consumption decisions are defined by Bourdieu as:

A) social capital.
B) social networks.
C) extended family.
D) social class.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
The use of social class as an explanatory consumer behaviour variable has been heavily influenced by two studies, both of which have developed a multiple-item index to measure social class. These studies are called:

A) Hollingshead Index of Social Position and Warner Bros. Index of Status Characteristics.
B) Hollingshead Index of Social Position and Harris's Index of Status Characteristics.
C) Hollingshead Index of Social Position and Warner's Index of Status Characteristics.
D) none of the given answers.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Traditional views of social class assume that for a social-class system to exist in a society the individual classes must meet five criteria. They must be:

A) bounded, ordered, mutually exclusive, inclusive and influential.
B) bounded, ordered, mutually exclusive, exhaustive and status system.
C) bounded, ordered, mutually exclusive, exhaustive and influential.
D) bounded, ordered, structured, exhaustive and influential.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 57 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
In the text, when discussing social class Holt believes that:

A) the upper class will always be interested in how a purchase might improve their social standing.
B) the higher class individuals value certain products for the instrumental opportunity they provide to demonstrate high levels of cultural knowledge, whereas those in the lower classes value these products' functional or terminal benefits.
C) higher class individuals value certain products based on how these fulfil their ego needs whereas those in the lower class are more interested in meeting their lower order needs.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
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51
What does the concept of relative occupational class income refer to? Give an example of how this may affect consumer behaviour.
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52
Provide examples of indicators used in the Hollingshead Index of Social Position.
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53
According to your text, which are some of the issues and assumptions marketers face in using social class?

A) Marketers tend to assume that all consumers desire upward social mobility.
B) Marketers tend to assume all consumers want to emulate the behaviours and consumption patterns of those above them in the social-class system.
C) Marketers tend to assume consumers always want to be exposed to advertising.
D) Marketers tend to assume that all consumers desire upward social mobility and that all consumers want to emulate the behaviours and consumption patterns of those above them in the social-class system.
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54
According to your text, in 2005 occupations of the employed in Australia and New Zealand reflect:

A) 'professionals' as the largest occupational group in Australia.
B) service and sales workers as the smallest occupational group in New Zealand.
C) advanced clerical and service workers as the largest occupational group in Australia.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
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55
Which concept addresses the question 'Will an individual with high status based on one dimension have high status based on the other dimensions?'

A) masstige
B) status stratification
C) status crystallisation
D) status consistency
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56
Which of the following is not a category listed in the ANZSCO classification?

A) managers
B) educators
C) community and personal service workers
D) clerical and administrative workers
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57
Marketers often use high social status products and services to attract members of the middle class. This is called an:

A) aspiring-push strategy.
B) aspiring-pull strategy.
C) upward-pull strategy.
D) None of the given answers are correct.
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