Everything about Positional Good totally explained
Positional goods are products and services whose value is mostly, if not exclusively, a function of their
ranking in desirability in comparison to substitutes. The extent to which a good's value depends on such a ranking is referred to as its
positionality.
Positional goods often earn
economic rents or
quasi-rents. Examples of positional goods include high
social status, exclusive
real estate, a spot in the freshman class of a prestigious university, a reservation at the "hottest" new restaurant, and fame. The measure of satisfaction derived from a positional good depends on how much one has in relation to everyone else. A society that devotes more resources to positional goods is arguably wasting effort, since a gain for one must come at a loss for another.
Competitions for positional goods are
zero-sum games because such goods are inherently scarce, at least in the short run. Attempts to acquire them can only benefit one player at the expense of others. By definition, not everyone can be the most popular, cool, or elite, and in the same sense not everyone can be a star athlete because all those terms imply a separation or superiority over other people. By the same token, land can't be created, but land rents arise largely because of a parcel's ranking in desirability against other plots.
In general, positional goods can't be created, only redistributed, while material goods can be created with time and effort. Most goods have a positional and a material component, however. Fast cars may be considered to be inherently scarce because your perception of the car's speed depends on its relation to other vehicles, but there's still an absolute value attached to satisfaction gained from the speed at which the car can travel, so it can be considered as having a positional aspect in that only some cars can be the
fastest. Since a car is a complex product made of many other materials, some of which are limited in supply (steel) and some which are renewable (leather), they may instead be
Veblen goods.
The term was coined by
Fred Hirsch in
1976 (in: Fred Hirsch, The Social Limits to Growth, Routledge & Kegan Paul, London, 1976 ISBN 0-674-81365-0). It is used to describe economic goods which are considered to possess a relative or social value rather than an absolute one.
Another example is that not everyone in a country can acquire the benefits of a
Rolls Royce because even if everyone could acquire one, it would no longer show status. Of course, the costs of manufacture are substantial, mainly due to use of rare materials and lack of
economies of scale due to limited output, but the consumer is 'paying for the name' and the company isn't necessarily making a higher profit because they're not just charging more for a perfectly normal car.
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