| Status symbol
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A million dollar home in Salinas, CA. Such homes, also referred to as McMansions are now rather common status symbols in the United States.
A status symbol is something, usually an expensive or rare object, that indicates a high social status for its owner.
[edit] Status symbols by region and time
What is considered a status symbol will differ between countries, based on the states of their economic and technological development, and common status symbols will change over time. For example, before the invention of the printing press, having a large collection of books would be considered a status symbol. After the advent of the printing press, having books was more common among the average citizen, and the possession of books was less of a status symbol. In the past, pearls and jade were major status symbols. Another common status symbol in the past which is still somewhat present today is heraldry, or one's family name.
Status symbols also indicate the cultural values of a society. For example, in a commercial society, having money or wealth and things that can be bought by wealth, such as cars, houses, or fine clothing, are considered status symbols. In a society that values honour or bravery, a battle scar would be more of a status symbol.
The condition of one's body can be a status symbol. In times past, when workers did physical labour outdoors under the sun and often had little food, being pale and fat was a status symbol, indicating wealth and prosperity, through having enough food and not having to do manual labour. Now, when workers usually do less-physical work indoors and find little time for exercise, being tanned and thin is often a status symbol.
[edit] Examples in Western society


A Mercedes-Benz luxury sedan is an example of a status symbol in the United States, as luxury vehicles are perhaps the most common status symbol found in western culture.
In a Western society, possessions perceived as status symbols include:
A trophy wife.
A large, expensive house.
A grand piano (especially if its owner does not know how to play it)
Expensive luxury cars, SUVs, yachts, or aircraft.
Expensive clothes.
Country club membership
Frequent luxury vacations
A marketable degree from a prestigious university, especially the Ivy League in the United States.
Expensive jewelry.
Expensive gadgets such as a large home theatre.
A fountain pen with rare Brazilian, Indian or African woods (e.g., ebony, mahogany), precious metals, and rare jewels.
Vacation homes.
Vineyards.
A 25-meter pool in the backyard.
[edit] See also
Luxury goods
Conspicuous consumption
Veblen good
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