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Mind Over Money
The Psychology of Money and How To Use It Better
Claudia Hammond
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Mind Over Money
The Psychology of Money and How To Use It Better
Claudia Hammond
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Why is it good to be grumpy if you want to avoid getting ripped off?Why do we think coins are bigger than they really are?Why is it a mistake to choose the same lottery numbers every week?Join award-winning psychologist and BBC Radio 4 presenter Claudia Hammond as she delves into big and small questions around the surprising psychology of money. Funny, insightful and eye-opening, Mind Over Money will change the way you think about the cash in your pocket and the figures in your bank account forever.
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Sujet
PsychologieSous-sujet
Histoire et théorie en psychologie1
FROM CRADLE TO GRAVE
Where our relationship with money starts, why money is both a drug and a tool, why we hate to see money destroyed and how it wards off our fear of death
If you are like me and enjoy the occasional bar of chocolate or the odd glass of wine, every time you indulge, your neurological reward system responds. A pathway is activated in your brain. You experience a spike of dopamine. Which gives you pleasure. Do it again, your brain seems to be saying. Do it again and youâll get another reward.
Itâs easy to see how parts of your brain might become active in these circumstances. A chemical and neurological chain reaction takes place. Yet the same thing has been shown to happen when people are given money.1 In one study winning money and having tasty apple juice squirted into the mouth produced similar responses in the brain.2 And the reward doesnât even have to be a coin or banknote as long as it represents money. When neuroscientists put people in a brain scanner and gave them vouchers as prizes when they won in a quiz, the brainâs limbic system released dopamine.3
Dopamine is all about immediate reward rather than delayed gratification. And whatâs remarkable here of course is that thereâs no direct link between consumption and reward. Money and vouchers are promissory. They promise you can do something in the future. Okay, you could rush down to the corner shop to buy wine or chocolate (maybe even with the vouchers) but the gratification still isnât instant.
Money is acting like a drug, not chemically but psychologically. Money hasnât existed for long enough in evolutionary terms for humans to develop a specific neural system to deal with it. So it seems as though a system usually associated with immediate rewards has been co-opted to deal with money. Sometimes neuroscientific studies can feel as though they simply reflect in the brain what we already know to be true from our experiences. Here neuroscience can tell us something more curious.
For a promise of money â someone merely saying theyâre going to give you money but not handing over notes or a voucher â doesnât have the same effect. When this happens, different regions of the brain are activated. We donât view the prospect of money in the same way as actual money (or even vouchers), despite the fact that the latter canât be spent immediately either.
So it appears we desire money for its own sake. Itâs a kind of drug. Of course money isnât physically addictive as such, but as Iâll show in Chapter 2, weâre all drawn, to varying degrees, to the thing itself.
Yet, at the same time, we desire money because it helps us to accomplish what we want in life. In other words, money is a tool: a way of getting the things we want.
Psychological research on our attitudes to money has tended to concentrate either on money as a drug or as a tool. But the British psychologists Stephen Lea and Paul Webley surely echo common sense in suggesting itâs both. Sometimes money seems to control us â money over mind; sometimes we are able to use money in the way we want â mind over money.
But of course itâs more complex than that too. Money affects our attitudes, our feelings and our behaviour. And these three dimensions interlink, merge and decouple in fascinating and downright strange ways.
Yet to complicate things even further, when money is destroyed our brains revert to seeing simply it as a tool.
Time to think back to that night on Jura, when the K Foundation burnt a million pounds. What was it that upset people so much about the destruction of cash?
In 2011, the husband-and-wife cognitive neuroscientists Chris and Uta Frith conducted a study that might shed some light on it.4 They slowly reversed prone volunteers into a brain scanner, where a mirror angled at 45° allowed them to watch a series of short videos on a screen. Each film lasted 6.5 seconds and every one featured the same woman wearing a black jumper and sitting at a shiny white table.
The people watching the video never saw the womanâs face, but they could see her torso and also her hands, which held a banknote. Sometimes the banknote was real, but worth a lot (the Danish krone equivalent of ÂŁ60); sometimes it was real but worth a lot less (the equivalent of ÂŁ12); and sometimes it was the same shape and size as a banknote, but featured scrambled-up pictures (making it obvious that the note was worthless).
As the people lying in scanners watched, the woman held up one of the notes, slowly moved her fingers to the centre of the top of the note and then ripped it very deliberately â from top to bottom. The reactions were what one might expect. When the woman was tearing up the obviously fake notes, people were fine about it. But when real money was destroyed they responded to a questionnaire saying they felt uncomfortable, particularly with the higher denominations.
In many countries, itâs illegal to deface or destroy money. In Australia, such action lays you open to a fine of up to A$5,000 or a two-year prison sentence.5 These were punishments that some felt the prime minister of the country should have faced back in 1992. Paul Keating was visiting the Townsville Oceanarium in North Queensland when a local artist asked him to autograph two A$5 banknotes. He did so, was filmed in the act and a storm of outrage followed.
It turned out the artist was protesting at the new design of the A$5 note, on which a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II had replaced that of the nineteenth-century human-rights campaigner Caroline Chisholm. (As weâll see in the next chapter such changes can stoke strong feelings.) But to add fuel to the flames, it was a time when the future of the Queen as Australiaâs head of state was the subject of much controversy, and Keating was also known to have reservations about the change. Angry royalists pointed out that another man who had stamped a protest message on banknotes had been convicted, so why not this artist and the prime minister?6
Another Australian, Philip Turner, discovered that defaced banknotes were rendered worthless when he was handed a A$20 note in his change at a petrol station. Written in felt tip pen on one side was the message: âHappy birthday.â (Nice â though it wasnât Mr Turnerâs birthday.) While on the other it said: âSuck it. Now you canât buy anything.â (Not so nice.) The unknown author of this two-faced foolery was right, though. Shops wouldnât accept the defaced note, the garage refused to take it back and not even the bank would exchange it.7
Writing on money is nothing new. What better way of literally getting your message into peopleâs pockets? In Britain the suffragettes did it. On display in the British Museum is a penny minted in 1903 and subsequently stamped with the slogan âVotes for womenâ.8 It was a clever method of protest, as such a low-value coin was likely to be passed around a lot before being taken out of circulation. But whoever stamped the coin took a big risk â at the time, defacing money could result in a prison sentence.
What of going a step further and trying to destroy money altogether? In the United States the seriousness with which the burning of banknotes is taken is clear from the language used in Title 18 of the United States code that prohibits it under the heading âMutilation of national bank obligationsâ. In practice, convictions seem to be rare. Desecrating flags is taken far more seriously. Across the border in Canada, the melting down of coins is banned, but for some reason notes arenât mentioned. While in Europe, the European Commission recommended in 2010 that member states must not encourage âthe mutilation of euro notes or coins for artistic purposes, but they are required to tolerate itâ.9
But these are the rules set by institutions. How about our personal feelings about the act of destroying money? We return to the Friths and their colleague, Cristina Becchio, who together measured the reactions of people watching as Danish banknotes were torn up. The experimenters did not fear prosecution as theyâd obtained permission from the Danske Bank to go ahead with the study. Even so, this destruction of money was clearly a transgressive act in the minds of most people.
As I mentioned earlier, the volunteers in the brain scanners described their distress as they watched the real notes being torn in half, but what was of real interest were the areas of the brain which were stimulated. It was not the regions usually associated with loss or distress that saw raised activity, but two small areas of the brain, the left fusiform gyrus and the left posterior precuneus. The first of these areas has been found in the past to have an involvement in the identification of pen-knives, fountain pens and nut-crackers; in other words, tools with a purpose. This suggests that the idea of money as a tool is not just descriptive. The association we make between printed sheets of paper and their usefulness is so strong that our brains appear to respond to them as if they were actual tools.
And this of course fits with the reasons many people have given over the years for feeling so upset about the K Foundationâs actions. They tend to emphasise all the useful things that could have been done with that money. Theyâre not, in other words, distressed at the destruction of the physical artefact (though in the next chapter Iâll show we are also attached to moneyâs concrete forms) but at the idea of the loss of its potential.
Iâm wary of reading too much into one study, and the authors concede that the changes in brain activity could have been caused by the sheer distress of watching the money get torn up. Previous studies have found that people with damage to a part of the brain called the amygdala stop minding so much about losing money. 10 The amygdala is a walnut-shaped area deep inside the brain associated with some, but not all emotions. Such studies suggest an emotional connection with money. Whatâs so fascinating about the Frithsâ study is that it hints at the symbolic nature of money: that we know that it can be used as a tool. It goes to show â as Iâll demonstrate again and again in this book â that when we look at, handle, or even just think about a sum of money, powerful reactions are stirred. Some good, some bad, some downright weird. But before that we need to look back to where our relationship with money all starts.
MONEY-MINDED CHILDREN
When small children first encounter money, they see it as something to value for itself. They handle a sparkly coin or a nice, crisp banknote and take pleasure in that. They quickly grasp that these pieces of metal or paper are to be treasured and not discarded, that when a grandparent sneaks a coin into their hand (itâs probably a note these days) it is something special, magical even. Iâm not sure that feeling ever stops. Certainly the novelist Henry Miller, in his non-fiction book, Money and How It Gets That Way, didnât think so. âTo have money in the pocket is one of the small but inestimable pleasures of life. To have money in the bank is not quite the same thing, but to take money out of the bank is indisputably a great joy.â11
Recently I was in a park with my friendâs four-year-old daughter, Tilly. Sheâd just been given a sparkly, beaded purse that contained a few coins sheâd saved. Every time a stranger passed, she waved her purse and shouted delightedly: âLook â Iâve got lots of money!â When I asked her what the loose change might buy her, she had no idea. That was not the point. She had money, and money was magnificent.
How strongly she wanted to hold onto it was shown when, after half an hour on the swings and slides, she refused to return home with us. We tried leaving her behind and telling her sheâd be there on her own. We tried threatening to report her to her mum when we got back to the house. We tried playing a chasing game. Nothing worked. She wouldnât budge from the playground. Then the little girlâs aunt had an idea. She grabbed Tillyâs purse when she wasnât looking and ran off with it. Sheâd only get her purse back if she came with us, Tilly was told. That did the trick. Tilly didnât know how much money sheâd lost, still less what it would buy her, but it was her money and she valued it for its own sake. She was starting her life-long relationship with money.
Itâs a relationship that becomes richer and more complex quite quickly.
When I was at junior school, my sister and I had savings accounts at the local building society. Occasionally, we would go in to deposit a pound in our accounts and come out proudly with our updated passbooks. One year, the building society held a competition to create a piece of art depicting their office, a Victorian villa situated on the roundabout just off the high street of the little town where we lived.
My entry was a collage. I made the walls of the building from pale yellow hessian. I cut out pieces of paper to look like people and placed them so that they were leaning out of the upstairs windows waving their passbooks. Looking back, Iâve no doubt it was these cut-out people who helped me to win the competition. But it was not because my artistic efforts so delighted the judges â one of whom was the building society manager. More likely it was down to my massive overestimation of interest rates.
Iâd filled in the little cardboard passbooks held by my paper people with figures such as: âDeposit: ÂŁ600, Interest: ÂŁ300. Balance: ÂŁ900â. Admittedly interest rates were running high in those days, but definitely not that high! Still, it showed that even as a little girl I had some understanding of how money works, even if I was sketchy on the detail. Iâd already been introduced to the concepts of saving, interest, deposits and balances. I knew that money wasnât just a matter of handing over a certain number of coins in order to get a certain number of sweets.
One study I particularly like about our early grasp of money involves a group of six-year-olds in a Finnish nursery school. Itâs 2008, and they sit on a carpet to create their own theatrical production. Adult producers are there to help them, but the point is for the children to make as many decisions about the play as possible â everything from the set design to the plot and the wording of the script.
After some discussion, they invent a story they call âSix Million Lionsâ. They select parts for themselves, with one boy insisting that he would play a table made from potatoes, a role that sounds as though it would stretch most actors, but which â in the spirit of self-determinism â is permitted. The whole idea of this project is for the children to be in control. The adults donât mention money, but that doesnât stop the children.
Marleena Stolp from the University of JyvĂ€skylĂ€ in Finland spent six weeks watching the theatre production, recording the childrenâs conversations and then analysing them.12 She soon found one topic that predominated â money. The children knew they were creating something with a market value; they discussed ticket prices and the possibility of filming the performance in order to sell the DVD in shops. They were only six years old, but far from viewing the play as simply an entertaining experience, they were already thinking about how to market and monetise it. There was no doubt that they loved the idea of making money. They even discussed how to select a ticket price that people would be prepared to pay, well aware that the market would not allow them to overcharge and that they risked having no paying audience if they did.
So these children already had some comprehension of money, pricing and the idea of the market. Where does this understanding of the value of money come from?
SAVING FOR A LUTE
In a study conducted in Hong Kong, a group of five- and six-year-olds were given the word âmoneyâ and asked to free associate. They had plenty to say on the subject. Not surprisingly, they mainly associated it with the ab...