the pew research center recently conducted a survey of 1,003 americans to determine their opinion on which consumer goods they consider a luxury and which they consider a necessity. here are their findings:
ITEM % RESPONDED NECESSITY
- car 88%
- landline phone 68%
- clothes dryer 66%
- air conditioner 55%
- television 52%
- home computer 50%
- cell phone 49%
- microwave 47%
- high-speed internet 31%
- cable/satellite tv 23%
- dishwasher 21%
- flat-screen tv 08%
- ipod 04%
generally speaking, you will notice in the internals of the data that the percentage who rate items as “necessary” is directly parallel to current macro-economics. each of the items above peaked as “necessary” in 2006 and have declined since. interesting how many in your pocket changes your view of possessions…
of the items above, which do you find interesting?
Valerie says
I’m middle age (yikes) and I have never run a dishwasher as an adult. We had one growing up, and there have been dishwashers in places I have rented and even owned, but I have always used them to store bakeware and large dishes. I enjoy washing the dishes, drying them and putting them away, and not dragging the chore into the next day. More peaceful after dinner without that sound, too!
Catz says
Dishwashers – we have one, but the easist thing to do is leave water and soap in the sink, and wash your item straight after use. There’s hardly any dishes in our house now. And we have a toddler!
Computers are necessary. Communication and ‘connectiveness’ boosts mental wellbeing (see previous blog). So are phones. And cars.
elena says
my perception of luxury
television 52%
microwave 47%
cable/satellite tv 23%
dishwasher 21%
flat-screen tv 08%
ipod 04%
Bianca says
I`d consider none of these things as necessary, but I must admit that I would feel hard done by if I had to give up my home computer with high speed internet and mobile phone.
summer says
Is it a necessity for me?
1. car As a family, yes, but we only have one.
2. landline phone No, we do not have one
3. clothes dryer I could live without it, but it would be hard
4. air conditioner I have lived without it in the past
5. television No, we do not have a tv
6. home computer I have lived without it in the past
7. cell phone I have lived without it in the past
8. microwave I think I could easily live without it
9. high-speed internet I have lived without it in the past
10. cable/satellite tv No, we do not have it
11. dishwasher No, we do not have it
12. flat-screen tv No, we do not have it
13. ipod No, we do not have it
We have 7 out of 13 things on this list, but we only need the car and the dryer.
Mneiae says
I’m in college, so I don’t have some of the above.
car no
landline phone no
clothes dryer yes
air conditioner no
television no
home computer yes
cell phone yes
microwave yes
high-speed internet yes
cable/satellite tv no
dishwasher no
flat-screen tv no
ipod no
Tiffany says
Here’s my opinion:
ITEM Do i need it:
car no
landline phone no
clothes dryer no
air conditioner yes
television no
home computer no
cell phone yes
microwave no
high-speed internet yes
cable/satellite tv no
dishwasher yes
flat-screen tv no
ipod yes
Deluxe says
Don’t have a car, don’t own a TV (so no flat-screen nor cable/satellite either), don’t have a landline phone (just my cell), no microwave, no clothes dryer, no dishwasher and no air conditioning. That gives me 4 out of 13.
Being in college (not in the US, btw), I don’t have the money (nor the space) for most of this stuff. Yet, looking back in a couple of years (when I will have a lot more stuff, statistically speaking, I hope it won’t come to this) I will probably consider this the best time of my life.
CLM says
Honestly none of the items listed is a necessity. They are all luxuries that most people in history never had the option to use. Certainly they can contribute to ease and entertainment but necessary, no!
CLM
Christy Zacharias says
Flatscreen? These were 13 year olds answering, weren’t they?! ;o)
It gets up to +35C here in the summer, and I have survived 35 years without a/c. Honestly, it’s a matter of what you’re used to living without.
And even if it is -35C (as it gets here in the winter), we could dry our clothes in the house – we wouldn’t just have any clear flat space in the house that day. ;o)
I guess I define “Necessity” as what we need to survive – food, water, a winter coat – not what we need to make life easier. As a result, I view almost everything as a luxury..icing on the cake of my life.
sarah says
interesting.
i agree that a car and clothes dryer are necessities in some areas and climates. i wouldn’t want to live without air conditioning in the summer either – i did as a kid and it was miserable. a phone of some sort, either landline or cell, is necessary too. i could (and mostly do) easily live without the rest.