Money isn’t important, but you have to have enough, so you don’t have to think about it. Thinking about money is a drag.
Depending on how you interpret it, “enough money that you don’t have to think about it” could mean a lot of money. And given that this is a famous musician talking...
To expand on Lumifer’s point, maybe most people really do care about positional goods. Or rather, they care about the status positional goods bring (and various indirect benefits of status). After all, there does seem to be a lot of independent evidence that most people care a lot about status.
maybe most people really do care about positional goods
And I’ll make a stronger point as well: people rich enough so that their “basic” needs are fulfilled effortlessly and semi-automatically care about status goods a great deal more than people who have to make budgets and worry about money.
A guy who buys a yacht and parks it in the marina “doesn’t use it” from one point of view, but does successfully use it from another point of view which considers that as a symbol of wealth and status it works perfectly fine at the dock (actually, works much better at the dock that in the open sea where not many people can see it).
Not high-status within their peer group anymore, you mean. I’ve heard people talk about this, and for many of them it may not be what they really want, but some people may value being part of a high-status peer group.
(What we really want to know is this: how often do people set out to make money with one purpose in mind, but get sucked into spending more and more money on positional goods they didn’t originally want?)
Are you referring to this?:
Depending on how you interpret it, “enough money that you don’t have to think about it” could mean a lot of money. And given that this is a famous musician talking...
To expand on Lumifer’s point, maybe most people really do care about positional goods. Or rather, they care about the status positional goods bring (and various indirect benefits of status). After all, there does seem to be a lot of independent evidence that most people care a lot about status.
And I’ll make a stronger point as well: people rich enough so that their “basic” needs are fulfilled effortlessly and semi-automatically care about status goods a great deal more than people who have to make budgets and worry about money.
A guy who buys a yacht and parks it in the marina “doesn’t use it” from one point of view, but does successfully use it from another point of view which considers that as a symbol of wealth and status it works perfectly fine at the dock (actually, works much better at the dock that in the open sea where not many people can see it).
I really don’t think it works for them—they keep changing their up their peers until they’re not high status any more.
Not high-status within their peer group anymore, you mean. I’ve heard people talk about this, and for many of them it may not be what they really want, but some people may value being part of a high-status peer group.
(What we really want to know is this: how often do people set out to make money with one purpose in mind, but get sucked into spending more and more money on positional goods they didn’t originally want?)
BTW I was thinking of “What’s the point of being rich, if you don’t know what to do with it?”