TY - JOUR
T1 - Cycles of inequality in the marketplace
T2 - insights from macro, marketer, and consumer perspectives
AU - Thompson, Debora V.
AU - Kirmani, Amna
AU - Hamilton, Rebecca
AU - Li, Andy
AU - du Plessis, Christilene
AU - Fernandes, Daniel
AU - Johnson, Guillaume
AU - McFerran, Brent
AU - Ni, Jian
AU - Pavlov, Vladimir
AU - Petersen, Francine
AU - Scheer, Lisa
AU - Vieites, Yan
AU - Wilcox, Keith
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Seeking inequality via differentiation is a fundamental theme in the marketing literature: consumers derive utility from products that convey socially valued attributes, and marketers target consumers by giving them opportunities to differentiate on socially valued attributes. However, as a large body of evidence shows, inequality can reduce consumer well-being and limit economic growth. In this paper, we take a systemic view of marketplace inequality, examining the interdependence among consumers, marketers, and macro forces in shaping inequality in markets for goods and services. Our broad review of the marketing literature across ten marketing journals and a variety of subdomains within the field (e.g., macromarketing, consumer behavior, marketing strategy, quantitative marketing) suggests that macro forces, marketers, and consumers are all part of a dynamic system in which each contributes to creating, perpetuating, and disrupting cycles of marketplace inequality. By highlighting the process by which inequality can be created, perpetuated, and reduced, we hope to give marketing researchers and practitioners insight into interventions that have the potential to increase consumer well-being and marketer profitability.
AB - Seeking inequality via differentiation is a fundamental theme in the marketing literature: consumers derive utility from products that convey socially valued attributes, and marketers target consumers by giving them opportunities to differentiate on socially valued attributes. However, as a large body of evidence shows, inequality can reduce consumer well-being and limit economic growth. In this paper, we take a systemic view of marketplace inequality, examining the interdependence among consumers, marketers, and macro forces in shaping inequality in markets for goods and services. Our broad review of the marketing literature across ten marketing journals and a variety of subdomains within the field (e.g., macromarketing, consumer behavior, marketing strategy, quantitative marketing) suggests that macro forces, marketers, and consumers are all part of a dynamic system in which each contributes to creating, perpetuating, and disrupting cycles of marketplace inequality. By highlighting the process by which inequality can be created, perpetuated, and reduced, we hope to give marketing researchers and practitioners insight into interventions that have the potential to increase consumer well-being and marketer profitability.
KW - Discrimination
KW - Income distribution
KW - Inequality
KW - Power
KW - Social class
KW - Status
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016750772
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2025.09.004
DO - 10.1016/j.ijresmar.2025.09.004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105016750772
SN - 0167-8116
JO - International Journal of Research in Marketing
JF - International Journal of Research in Marketing
ER -