There was a time when people bought things because they genuinely needed them. A phone was just a device to communicate. Clothes were bought for comfort. Eating outside was occasional. Spending had purpose, and most middle-class families in India were taught one simple principle: save first, spend later.
But somewhere over the last 15–20 years, that relationship with money quietly changed.
Today, people are not just buying products anymore. They are buying feelings. A premium phone is no longer only about technology. It has become identity. Branded clothing is no longer just fashion. It signals status. Even vacations are no longer simply about relaxation; they have become social proof.
And this shift is affecting financial behaviour far more deeply than most people realise.
Watch Full Video - We explored this topic deeply in our detailed video on consumer psychology, emotional spending, social comparison, and the business of insecurity - https://youtu.be/E9f1ND6BN5Q?si=4klmPPquXk7W5HDo
India has seen tremendous economic growth over the last two decades. Salaries have risen, digital payments have exploded, credit has become easily accessible, and online shopping has made consumption effortless. But despite rising incomes, financial anxiety among the middle class has also increased sharply.
Household debt has risen significantly, while personal loans and credit card usage continue to grow rapidly. Many salaried professionals today feel financially stuck despite earning far more than previous generations.
That contradiction reveals something important.
The modern economy is no longer driven only by needs. Increasingly, it is being driven by perception, comparison, and emotional consumption. This is where the problem begins.
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Earlier, spending decisions were largely practical. People bought things when they were needed, and savings represented security for the future.
Today, spending has become emotional. People increasingly buy things:
This is a major psychological shift. The economy has quietly moved from a need-based consumption model to a perception-based consumption model. Products are no longer judged only by utility. They are judged by image, symbolism, social signalling, and status value. And once spending becomes emotional, consumption becomes endless because emotions never remain permanently satisfied.
Social media accelerated this behavioural shift massively. Every day, people are exposed to carefully curated lifestyles:
Over time, comparison becomes subconscious.
Even financially stable individuals begin feeling inadequate after constantly consuming these digital lifestyles. And the dangerous part is that this comparison rarely feels obvious. It quietly shapes financial behaviour in the background. This is one reason why many people today earn more than previous generations, yet still feel financially insecure.
In Behavioural Economics, there is a concept called signalling theory. It explains how people often buy things not purely for utility, but to communicate something about themselves.
Consumption becomes communication. Businesses understand this psychology extremely well. Modern marketing no longer focuses only on explaining what a product does. Instead, it increasingly focuses on how a product makes people feel.
Many industries first create dissatisfaction and then position their product as the solution.
Beauty industries monetise appearance anxiety. Fashion industries monetise social comparison. Technology companies monetise the fear of being outdated. Lifestyle brands monetise status insecurity.
Different industries. Same emotional pattern. “You are not enough yet.”
The middle class sits in a uniquely vulnerable position. Not poor enough to avoid consumer pressure. Not wealthy enough to feel financially secure. That creates constant psychological tension.
As salaries increase, lifestyles often rise faster than savings. For many working professionals, every increment gradually turns into:
But very little long-term wealth creation. This is why many people work for 10–15 years, earn decent salaries, and still feel financially stressed. The issue is not always low income. The issue is that emotional spending quietly consumes future wealth before it gets the chance to compound.
Most people underestimate the long-term cost of emotional spending.
A ₹10,000 impulse purchase may not feel significant today. But if invested consistently over long periods, that same amount can create substantial future wealth through compounding.
If someone invests ₹10,000 every month at 12% annual returns for 20 years, the final amount becomes nearly ₹1 crore.
A = 10000 \cdot \frac{(1+0.12/12)^{240}-1}{0.12/12}
Now imagine how many emotional purchases silently delay that process. That is the real cost of modern consumerism.
The loss is not only the money spent today. The bigger loss is the future wealth that never gets created.
Digital platforms have created what many now call the “validation economy.”
People increasingly attach self-worth to visible lifestyles, social approval, and external perception.
This creates:
People start spending money not because they genuinely need something, but because they want to feel respected, admired, or relevant. And because digital exposure is constant, the pressure never fully disappears. That is why financial awareness today is no longer just about Investing.
It is also about understanding psychology.
Completely escaping consumer culture is unrealistic. But awareness can dramatically improve decision-making. One of the most effective habits is delaying non-essential purchases for 24–48 hours. Most impulse spending disappears once emotions settle.
Automating investments before spending also creates financial discipline naturally. When savings happen first, lifestyle inflation becomes easier to control.
Most importantly, people need to separate identity from consumption. Because when confidence depends on external validation, spending becomes endless. But when confidence comes from skills, health, discipline, knowledge, and personal growth, the need for constant upgrading reduces naturally.
Consumption itself is not the enemy.
The problem begins when spending becomes a way to fix emotional insecurity.
The system will continue encouraging people to compare more, upgrade more, and consume more because that is how modern economies grow. But awareness changes how people respond to that pressure.
Real financial freedom is not simply about earning more money. It is about developing the ability to think independently in a world constantly trying to influence emotions, attention, and behaviour.
And perhaps the biggest upgrade in life is not what people buy.
It is how they think.
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