Luxury Vehicles and Happiness

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июл 2022
  • An exciting new purchase may not be exciting for long, and the people around us are also seeking out positional goods. A fancy car feels less fancy when your friend gets a nicer one, and people are in a subconscious arms race to have the nicest stuff.
    This hedonic treadmill of conspicuous consumption is difficult to escape. An important question is whether people with luxury vehicles actually enjoy their vehicles more.
    Referenced in this video:
    The influence of positionality in car-purchasing behaviour on the downsizing of new cars: chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/www.utwente.nl/en/et/ce/resea...
    Why don't we learn from poor choices? The consistency of expectation, choice, and memory clouds the lessons of experience: efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites...
    Temporal Adjustments in the Evaluation of Events: The ‘‘Rosy View’’sci-hub.se/doi.org/10...
    Luxury car owners are not happier than frugal car owners link.springer.com/article/10....
    Balance andrewhallam.com/balance/
    The Next Millionaire Next Door rowman.com/ISBN/9781493052752...
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Комментарии • 549

  • @richlane64
    @richlane64 Год назад +48

    Just my view but I really admire folk who don’t spend to impress and have a humility about them. Great video Ben.

  • @jps0117
    @jps0117 11 месяцев назад +23

    "Having is not so pleasing a thing as wanting." -- Spock

  • @jimma2815
    @jimma2815 Год назад +147

    I am in China, and buying a Luxury Vehicle means something more than a driving experience, which is also an investment. Many or most small business dealers will simply judge your wealth or the company simply on cars. SO, buying a luxury car is like an entrance ticket to a business environment, even it sounds so stupid.

    • @samsonsoturian6013
      @samsonsoturian6013 Год назад +15

      Yes, but their culture is all about putting on a face. In fact, to "put on a face" is a Chinese expression that Americans picked up.
      China is the world's largest consumer of luxury goods for this reason. And the world's largest producer and consumer of fake luxury items too. To include boxed wine put in wine bottles from vintage wine sellers in and sold full price.

    • @prestonlui6451
      @prestonlui6451 Год назад +10

      This remind me on how private equity actually give founder liquidity premium when buying their business, to make sure the founder have some money. This is not just to make the founder be financially motivated but also make sure the founder is living a luxurious enough life to make other investors find the business legit.
      Which in some sense makes sense.

    • @cat-.-
      @cat-.- Год назад +13

      In China, on the road, people will cut you off, or pass you in annoying ways when you're driving an el cheapo volkswagen, but never so if you drive a porsche.
      Even in America there's a group of people whose brains work this way. It's annoying to think how shallow most people are.

    • @XAUCADTrader
      @XAUCADTrader Год назад +3

      @@cat-.- This makes sense, can you imagine the insurance payout if you ding those cars? Also, you could be screwing with someone powerful. It's not shallowness, it's just innate/subconscious risk management.

    • @XAUCADTrader
      @XAUCADTrader Год назад

      Shameful part of our culture, it's very primitive. It's ironic that it's happening in the communist People's Republic of China, and not to the same extent in the free Republic of China.

  • @flewelling55
    @flewelling55 Год назад +14

    Lucius Seneca figured this out 2000 years ago. "At last, then, away with all these treacherous goods! They look better to those who hope for them than to those who have attained them. If there were anything substantial in them, they would sooner or later satisfy you; as it is, they merely rouse the drinkers’ thirst. Away with fripperies which only serve for show!"

  • @ohedd
    @ohedd Год назад +98

    The exception to this is car enthusiasts, who enjoy the cars not primarily for their quality as a positional good, but for their quality as a collectible.

    • @safwanreza2387
      @safwanreza2387 Год назад +14

      Or sports cars those have a much stronger effect on driving experience than luxury vehicles. And often times you drive them on weekends just for the sake of driving them

    • @coffeeandlifting
      @coffeeandlifting Год назад +5

      @@safwanreza2387 True for sports cars vs luxury cars. But within the realm of sports cars itself, I am certain that the same thing applies There is no correlation between how expensive a sports car is and how much fun it is to drive if you're a real enthusiast. If you've ever been part of a real driving scene all you have to do is picture the maniacs who thrash Miatas, S2000's, and old civics and tell me that they're not having more fun than the boomers who drive automatic corvettes and 911's and never turn off traction control.

    • @zakwilson3276
      @zakwilson3276 Год назад +12

      @@coffeeandlifting As someone with both a 911 and a Miata (both late 90s era cars) I can confirm price does not correlate linearly with fun. Miata:Porsche cost of ownership is about 1:3. Fun ratio is more like 1:1.2 sometimes even skewing toward miata depending on the road/track and weather. So why pay to hold on to the Porsche? I ask myself that every time I have to buy parts. P cars just have a little magic that either resonates with the driver or it doesn't. If it does its pretty hard to go back to not owning one. Hard to say whether that justifies the price tag or not, but maybe that's just what makes enthusiasm the exception to the rule here.

    • @coffeeandlifting
      @coffeeandlifting Год назад +1

      @@zakwilson3276 Great insight. Nowadays the equation is even more complicated for enthusiasts because newer cars, despite looking exciting on paper, have lots of weird driver constraints like stability assist and traction control that can never be fully disabled. Or worse, fully-electronic transmissions which don't allow for burnouts, drifting, or any number of other maneuvers unless it is part of a pre-programmed feature. There are posts on every car model forum by desperate owners trying to find out why their car still cuts power during autocross or touge even though they have traction "off." Imagine buying a brand-new "performance" car and then realize that performance is prohibited by the car's computer. What a nightmare.

    • @SKYxNINE
      @SKYxNINE Год назад

      @@coffeeandlifting I never thought about cpu overriding things. Care to share some of the common sports car people take to autocross/tracks and not be able to do as they please?

  • @robpole4150
    @robpole4150 Год назад +69

    Most people live their lives based on envy. It's not only luxury vehicles. Do we need a 4000sq ft house for a family of four? Great video!!!

    • @muffemod
      @muffemod Год назад

      My home is 525 square feet. I live alone yo.

    • @naxT890
      @naxT890 Год назад +10

      yes we do. need to stay away as far as possible when wife is angry.

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 6 месяцев назад +2

      Illusion of middle class dream to sell things we don’t need to impress those we don’t (and do) know. Shrewd corps have used prof’l psychologists for marketing since early 1900s. It worked and still does.

  • @hussamg
    @hussamg Год назад +2

    Always great to get your views on various topics! Hope you can create more videos

  • @sciencefellows777
    @sciencefellows777 8 месяцев назад +1

    Intresting and insightfull.....

  • @ChaosDarkLight
    @ChaosDarkLight Год назад +1

    Finally finished binging all your videos!

  • @JRvillablancademendoza
    @JRvillablancademendoza 4 месяца назад +3

    WOW!!! The last sentence you said was …. 🤯 I wish I could be as articulate as you so I could help educate my friends around me!!!

  • @Delta3angle
    @Delta3angle Год назад +4

    I agree with this video although I think there is a point of diminishing returns In terms of happiness with regards to a vehicles quality. A piece of junk will cause plenty of stress independent of hedonistic adaptation. But a brand new Camry will likely bring about a similar amount of happiness compared to a brand new Cadillac, especially over the long term.
    I believe vehicles that bring about experiential benefits like motorcycles can certainly be a good investment in terms of happiness. Experiences such as exploring beautiful riding destinations and relaxing Sunday cruises can be hard to quantify, but they certainly don't get old.

  • @curtismeyer8698
    @curtismeyer8698 Год назад +4

    I very much enjoy mine. Which is an upraged model of a car I had previously. The ride and comfort is better. Then there is the aspect of going for a “fun drive” don’t have to worry about those who “ don’t want to let you pass” as the power in most of these cars superceede most cars on the road. His is the positive driving experience for me.
    The negative experience is the maintenance cost. Oil changes are stupid expensive comparatively, fixing a broken xxxx is more than 5x. Insurance is almost 2x. Tires are 2-3x.
    I will say I did not buy this new and with vehicle depreciation I would never buy new. But it as a dream car for me. I would not change that experience of finally experiencing it but will take greater caution in 10 years when it’s time for a newer vehicle

  • @s.w.m2108
    @s.w.m2108 Год назад

    너무 좋다♥️

  • @blackattack1840
    @blackattack1840 Год назад +31

    As a guy who went from a barely functional rust-bucket to a fancy Mazda6, I NEVER take it for granted.
    So maybe it's the jump from decent car to luxury car that's not so grad. Happiness plateaus and status quos and all that.

    • @Team.Bull.Trading
      @Team.Bull.Trading Год назад

      Wʜᴀsᴀᴘᴘ ᴍᴇ^^^👆

    • @DerekWrightX
      @DerekWrightX Год назад +1

      Yeah as somebody who's had tons of car problems i feel this comment

    • @thomasa5619
      @thomasa5619 Год назад +8

      I don’t think it’s controversial to say it’s worth it to have a reliable car or features you care about like AC

    • @hermanwooster8944
      @hermanwooster8944 Год назад +6

      This.
      I've driven cars that felt like they were beating my kidneys.
      I drove another econobox that felt smooth and wonderful.
      It's not the cost. It's the value you get for your dollar that matters the most.

    • @chrischoy9
      @chrischoy9 3 дня назад

      I never knew Mazda6 were considered luxury cars. It’s more of a premium commuter which is a perfectly practical car

  • @KingDrewPhilip
    @KingDrewPhilip 4 месяца назад +4

    I got a Lexus IS250 last year just to flex. Just kidding, I really needed a car because my 2004 Toyota Corolla broke down at 320k miles. A relative of mine had a 2009 Lexus IS250 and I purchased it in full. I think this luxury car that I have now was worth it because it’s still very reliable as it truly is just a Toyota. What an upgrade from my old car as well. This car feels a lot stronger and more powerful. Like driving a tank , but not really… it’s just built very well.

    • @laja82
      @laja82 Месяц назад

      My 2013 IS 250 feels much sturdier than the Corolla, Jetta, Kia Soul etc cars that I've rented over the years. It is absolutely worth it

  • @Acquisition1913
    @Acquisition1913 Год назад +1

    what a great channel ☀️

  • @TheRealThunderTurtle
    @TheRealThunderTurtle 2 дня назад

    This is the exact information I was in need for.

  • @videoforum4047
    @videoforum4047 Год назад +7

    Driving 2009 diesel renault and im having a blast

  • @ardaertanyildiz1063
    @ardaertanyildiz1063 Год назад +15

    Ben trying to decrease infliation

  • @landongendur
    @landongendur Год назад +3

    Still driving my 2008 RAV4 with 177K miles on it. The tire pressure need topping up every few days & it burns oil, but there's no way in hell I'm getting anything different in this crazy 2022 car market.

  • @FitnessFAQs
    @FitnessFAQs Год назад +9

    Succinct summary of the data Felix, great work.

  • @anasmraz7
    @anasmraz7 Год назад

    This video is golden

  • @AnandSatya
    @AnandSatya Год назад

    Superb content!!!! Can you create a video in effect of interest rate on real estate prices?

  • @Weedsethesecond
    @Weedsethesecond Год назад +238

    It is quite fascinating to watch Ben Felix gradually developing himself from stock market guru to evidence based happiness coach. Great content as always!

    • @MegaBassGX
      @MegaBassGX Год назад +13

      I think his covering the psychology part of investing, nothing changed

    • @roakes1956
      @roakes1956 Год назад +4

      I have always viewed Ben Felix as a very good market analysis with at balanced outlook on life. Having worked with a few such people, I am convinced that one goes with the other...

    • @MoneywithPennies
      @MoneywithPennies Год назад +1

      "Evidence based happiness coach". Love it. =)

    • @Jeronimoooo
      @Jeronimoooo Год назад

      I think it's more accurate to say that he's gravitating towards behavioral economics, which is a field interested in the real choices people on the basis of bounded (or limited) rationality. This can be contrasted with the classic view of a market analyst who will assume that actors behave rationally and therefore should (and will!) make the best choice between choices availeble to them. Just the same, I would consider Ben an economist first and foremost, then a coach.

    • @DevinSmith1486
      @DevinSmith1486 Год назад

      It is quite fascinating to watch Ben Felix.

  • @perfectscotty
    @perfectscotty 8 месяцев назад

    I have a 2022 Mercedes’ Benz GLE 350 and love it.

  • @Ulfilias
    @Ulfilias 10 месяцев назад +3

    I like cars and like driving and I do like Luxury vehicles. However you can get older luxury vehicles for pretty cheap prices, which give pretty much the same experience for pretty cheap.
    NEW cars are a silly money pit that have massive depreciation. Sure older cars can need a little more maintenance, but the new cars are not without issue either. Driving an 80k car for 5k because it's an older luxury vehicle gives all the comfort, power and 95% of the prestige, because most people see the size, marque and quality :D

    • @streettrialsandstuff
      @streettrialsandstuff 4 месяца назад

      I own a 2003 BMW X5 which was considered a luxury vehicle at the time and it feels amazing to drive. The build quality is very good, it looks and feels nearly as new. The interior is in mint condition and everything works. Of course, I had to spend a total of 20k including the purchase price and repairs which is nearly half, but it is worth it. You can't buy an X5 in better condition with that money. The only problem I have with it is the fuel efficiency of the V8.

  • @victorsvorinich1595
    @victorsvorinich1595 Год назад +9

    Last year, I bought myself a new truck, which is a luxury item for me. I have to say, I love driving it more than my old Honda, more enticed to travel places if I use it, and love getting it washed. For me, it heightens the driving experience. I get the data, but there’s also the side that people just love driving great cars, and respect the engineering marvels they are.

    • @Pwnsweet
      @Pwnsweet Год назад +1

      This is me

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад

      "love getting it washed" This is NOT the driving experience. You're enjoying the hedonism, the feeling of owning something you feel is more than others have. The "driving experience"... dude, you bought a truck, not an 86, not a Miata, not an Elise. Yes, exactly as he said about the studies, when asked about the experience later on and you think about it, you evaluate the experience as being better, likely for a variety of reasons, including things like confirmation bias. But when asked just after completing drives... the data is that those drives aren't actually more enjoyable. Sure, maybe you're just an outlier, but everything you're saying sounds very typical of what people report that don't enjoy driving their cars more in the studies.

  • @kevinhawthorne5257
    @kevinhawthorne5257 Год назад

    Great Video!

  • @KhandokarRobi
    @KhandokarRobi Год назад

    LOVE IT

  • @TheMrwright1
    @TheMrwright1 Год назад +8

    Going from a ford escape to a BMW X5 last year i can assure you... I do not take my car for granted. I actually enjoy driving now and my wife takes my car more than her own. (Also a luxury vehicle). I agree with this concept for most people. My circumstances are different which puts me in the exception category. The extra 20k I paid for my luxury vehicle is worth the thrill/enjoyment and comfort of the drive for me.

    • @wackychicken
      @wackychicken Год назад

      Love big and get a Lexus 😄

    • @ame3690
      @ame3690 Год назад +1

      Yep same here! I went from toyota to BMW and while i appreciate both the experience of the drive is much better in the BMW. From feeling safer, to better control, to just the comfort. The only thing my corolla had a one up was the how quickly the ac got cold! 🤣

    • @TheMrwright1
      @TheMrwright1 Год назад

      @Amber Mihalski yeah whats up with the ac in BMWs? The heat is the surface of the sun in minutes.

  • @zclaus9642
    @zclaus9642 Год назад +3

    my poorer brother wants to buy a new car cuz he wants the experience of "owning something new." i think this video would apply to him too

  • @learnwithkris2590
    @learnwithkris2590 Год назад +2

    Subaru leased. Best thing I did.

  • @TasuraX
    @TasuraX Год назад

    What is the definition of luxury vehicles? For me something above 50k would be luxury especially since i dont need it but i want it. Any new bmw/audi etc would be considered luxury in my view. Going from an old rusty ford with 60hp to my first proper car with 150hp was an amazing feeling and still makes me happy whenever i go for a drive. Its not a very expensive or luxurious car but i do look back at it in the parkinglot and smile. Im certain that a more expensive and nicer car would increase my enjoyment of it. Also considering it would most likely be less prone to breaking down. In general i enjoy driving and if there was a magical car that would look like a lambo to me but an old civic to anyone else it would still increase my enjoyment of it simply because i like looking at it, i dont need it as a status symbol or anything like that.
    A friends of mine has a 120k € AMG and that doesn't diminish my enjoyment of my car at all, quite the opposite its fun to see him enjoy his car and talk about cars with people that like their own too.
    I think using a house or a car to improve perception of yourself is a flawed idea in general, ofcourse people that want attention will get some of it but does that actually fullfill you in any way beyond that initial spark? Im proud to say i worked for something have bought like an expensive gaming pc or having a good amount of money saved up for emergency yet i dont feel better for telling people. In fact nobody that hasn't been in my home would know that i keep any valuables. I get more fulfillment from beeing able to say i am happy and healthy than shoving money into people's face to compensate for insecurities

  • @oskarkranks7789
    @oskarkranks7789 Год назад

    Hi Ben Felix
    Can you touch on optionsstrategies for retail investors? Such as LEAPS, PMCC, The wheel

  • @myazer
    @myazer Год назад

    I drive an Audi S4.... totally worth it!!! Vroom....

  • @hermanwooster8944
    @hermanwooster8944 Год назад +2

    If I was on a desert island, I wouldn't want a luxury car.
    I'd want a luxury boat.

  • @jakel8627
    @jakel8627 Год назад +1

    I love Lexus cars 🤩

  • @__-tz6xx
    @__-tz6xx Год назад +2

    I should buy a bike and bike to work and enjoy the commute. I like eating cheap foods like homemade burritos and pb & j sandwiches. If you can value and enjoy cheep things then saving and investing money becomes easier.

  • @triple_gem_shining
    @triple_gem_shining Год назад

    Good content. Good perspective

  • @LG123ABC
    @LG123ABC 7 месяцев назад +1

    Would a large vehicle, like a Suburban, be considered a "luxury" vehicle? I like mine for the room and the safety but it's also 18 years old.

  • @raffaelepiccini3405
    @raffaelepiccini3405 19 дней назад

    I know some people who own luxury vehicles, they don’t use them for daily commute, but more as a hobby.. they take it for a ride on the weekend, sure it’s a hella expensive hobby, but still

  • @1792dt
    @1792dt Год назад

    I love racing.

  • @WheresMyPolenta
    @WheresMyPolenta Год назад +5

    “Would you still want your luxury vehicle If you lived alone on a desert island”
    Love that!
    Been wanting a Tesla but this made me reevaluate that..

    • @PJ-hi1gz
      @PJ-hi1gz Год назад +2

      We don’t live on desert islands though. I wouldn’t want even a cheap car on a desert island.

    • @rodrigovaccari7547
      @rodrigovaccari7547 Год назад +1

      Its a good thought experiment, but not really a valid argument to not buy a vehicle you want. On a desert island the things you'd want would be things such as a knife, spear, rope, and tons of other things you dont care about on a daily basis... An extreme circunstance doesnt tell you how you should live your normal average days.

    • @Muhluri
      @Muhluri 11 месяцев назад

      Ngl I'd totally get a Porsche 911 Dakar if I lived on a desert island.
      In my case the argument falls flat because of my interest in Cars 😂

  • @eddenoy321
    @eddenoy321 Год назад +1

    Has no one ever heard about "keeping up with the Jones's" . JEEZ ! Buy what you need, not what you want. ( Even if I had tons of money to squander, I could think of better uses for it than a Lambo, etc.).

    • @CraigMilesYoutube
      @CraigMilesYoutube 16 дней назад

      Yep, the founder of IKEA drove round in a 20 year old Volvo estate apparently. Real wealth doesn't necessarily care about looking rich. In fact I knew a very wealthy barrister and landlord, that drove 95% of the time in an old hatchback.

  • @nogueiradario
    @nogueiradario Год назад +1

    Ben, i just want you to know, you are awesome!

  • @zolopane117
    @zolopane117 Год назад +11

    The hard cut at 3:01 while Ben pulls himself together after that take had me rolling

    • @isr1825
      @isr1825 Год назад

      Was looking for this comment. Too funny haha

  • @michaelkavchak4521
    @michaelkavchak4521 Год назад

    Love this Ben, will share!

  • @GLub-ew6tz
    @GLub-ew6tz Год назад +4

    I’ve always had several vehicles. I have my daily commuter (Toyota Prius prime), my weekend car (Tesla Y) and my motorcycles (Harley, triumph, Ducati & Honda). In Ca it’s always traffic everywhere so daily driving sucks, but on weekends when I drive my Tesla or my motorcycles, I love it and I really enjoy the experience.

    • @Team.Bull.Trading
      @Team.Bull.Trading Год назад

      Wʜᴀsᴀᴘᴘ ᴍᴇ^^^👆

    • @SKYxNINE
      @SKYxNINE Год назад +4

      Can I ask why you don't drive the Tesla as a daily? Your battery will depreciate whether you drive it or not.

  • @jsurette7521
    @jsurette7521 Год назад

    I get it, rationally speaking. But damn there's something about revving my Corvette! Not my daily driver and strictly used for recreation so maybe falls into a different category?

  • @yinyanz
    @yinyanz Год назад +2

    Makes sense on a high level Ben as this falls under the umbrella of buy experiences over material good.
    But if you are not entrenched in your viewpoint, there is a caveat to this.
    The Car Enthusiast.
    When they buy a luxury car say like BMW they also are essentially joining a community. An enthusiast community they meet with and can enable people to become friends with like minded people and even become long term friends.

    • @SuperFlamethrower
      @SuperFlamethrower Год назад

      Ben also says to get that coffee which is not congruent with other gurus out there. I think the thinking behind that is it gives hedonism-style pleasure (which is important for happiness) at a low price most people can afford.

    • @yinyanz
      @yinyanz Год назад

      @@SuperFlamethrower I mean when you join a car community you can also go to track days (Usually requires and expensive car or at-least performance oriented). This can give you a repeated sense of feel good. But I think if you are buying for the sake of status then yes this can be very true.

    • @rdmz135
      @rdmz135 Год назад +3

      The whole luxury thing doesn't really apply to car enthusiasts imo. Turn up to your average local car meet and its full of 90s Japanese shitboxes and heavily abused/badly modified German cars. Nothing luxurious about it. Don't have to spend much to buy a fun car.

  • @inertiaforce7846
    @inertiaforce7846 Год назад +6

    I've owned both luxury cars and regular cars and I will say regular cars are much less stressful. The worst place to be is a mechanic shop getting bullshitted and/or ripped off. A reliable car that minimizes your exposure to needing maintenance and repair is the least stressful.

  • @rosstomlinson8584
    @rosstomlinson8584 Год назад

    Interesting video Ben. However, in the list of the most wealthy you failed to include their actual luxury vehicle… their private jet.

  • @savinayn
    @savinayn Год назад +9

    I think this makes sense, with one caveat that I learned from a financially savvy fellow a few years ago - this logic applies to luxury v. economy, but I think an important category is considering safety. Often more “expensive” cars have more safety/security features (with diminishing returns, of course). And for many people, driving is one of the most common, and actuarially unsafe things they do consistently day to day. There’s nothing more important to me than my life and the lives of those I love. There’s no price I can put on that. To that end, purchasing/leasing new vehicles every few years with significantly improved safety outcomes, may be more worth it than driving a beater into the ground and investing the unspent capital. The latter just gets you more money. The former potentially gets you more time with the ones you love.

    • @fmac6441
      @fmac6441 10 месяцев назад +7

      But in that case wouldn't it be a discussion between new versus old?
      A current Corolla has possibly more active and passive safety items than a Volvo S80 from the 00s

    • @TrustNo1butMe
      @TrustNo1butMe 10 месяцев назад

      That is a really good point. Thx!

    • @newstuff1107
      @newstuff1107 4 месяца назад

      I think nowadays the less expensive/ moderately aged cars are just as safe as the pricier ones. They have the airbags, seat belts, etc. The risk of getting an accident and getting more injured in that accident with a better priced car is minimal.

  • @ThioJoe
    @ThioJoe Год назад +54

    My car is an '06 and I fortunately have never had a desire to have a better one. I've always said I'll drive my car into the ground until I can buy a true self driving car. Helps that I rarely have to drive though.

    • @triple_gem_shining
      @triple_gem_shining Год назад

      2009 Prius here 😂

    • @joshspinney
      @joshspinney Год назад +2

      What's Thio doing here!

    • @NoName-to5xl
      @NoName-to5xl Год назад +2

      2009 here. Self-driving is not enough to convince me, it has to be a revolutionary tech that reduces cost of operation at least 25%.

    • @armanidesigner
      @armanidesigner Год назад

      It's about money, status and freedom, who has these things has higher status, better women and therefore better life, study Jordan Peterson research about animals, evolutionary things stay same with humans too

    • @MegaBassGX
      @MegaBassGX Год назад

      @@armanidesigner Jordan is woke

  • @mattlm64
    @mattlm64 Год назад +7

    Some people are genuinely car enthusiasts. My uncle has a couple of high end sports cars but he's very much into them and will go to car shows etc.

    • @thomas7365
      @thomas7365 Год назад +9

      I think then the expenditure is covered as 'spending money on your hobbies' as ben mentioned

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад

      This was considered though. They don't appear to make him happier driving them from A to B on the daily, he's happier for other intangible reasons, including going to car shows, an experience with other like-minded people, etc.

  • @johnaashmore
    @johnaashmore Год назад

    ........waiting........waiting...........

  • @fredericp64
    @fredericp64 Год назад +1

    I drive a 2007 Toyota Corolla and have since barely brought it to the garage other than for regular maintenance. THAT'S the satisfaction I strive for in a car, nothing else.

  • @joemarino4519
    @joemarino4519 Год назад +2

    great video and topic! I think like a lot of other things, getting out of the bottom tier (unreliable, dangerous car) and into the 'common' tier (recently new, reliable car) is the most important distinction. After that, I think being able to afford a car that does what you want provides a good return. Like a truck to haul your work/leisure tools or a van to haul your kids

  • @ZazaBear
    @ZazaBear Год назад +2

    Thank you for the video! As always, you are immaculate in your succinct research-ridden presentation.
    There's a psychologist/therapist/professor named Kirk Honda (whose channel is called Psychology in Seattle), and he's touched on this topic across several videos, usually tangentially. He's very careful with making sure that what he says aligns with recent literature.
    All this is to say that your video lines up with what an accomplished psychologist shares!
    Which is great, but not unexpected -- I'm always impressed by how thorough you are with your research. It's one of the many things that make your content outstanding. Thanks again!

  • @bahaamadi2749
    @bahaamadi2749 Год назад

    Reminds me of Lacan's object of desire

  • @ame3690
    @ame3690 Год назад +2

    I've owned two cars, my first car that I drove for nearly 12 years (a toyota corolla) and now own a BMW 320i. I would say that the message and study (for me) is only partially true. I consistently enjoy the features of driving a "luxury" car, even looking at it makes me feel satisfied because i think a lot of cars now a a days look like they're made of plastic and the BMW looks like a quality machine. The BMW also has depreciated slower. Though, I also thoroughly enjoyed driving my toyota corolla and it took a lot of convincing for me to sell it and buy another car.
    I think it's just happy people are happy, and less satisfied people are just that - what you wear, what you drive, where you live is mostly relative.

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад

      BMW, a quality machine my ass. Have you not seen the fake chrome shit they design around every exhaust. It looks utterly ridiculous, cheap, and tacky. Maybe if you've got an old BMW in pristine condition, but the new ones are full of plastic crap, likely even moreso than many of the cheapest brands.

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад

      Also note that, "makes me feel satisfied because i think a lot of cars now a a days look like they're made of plastic and the BMW looks like a quality machine." is not an evaluation of how happy you were while driving the vehicle, it's pre/post hoc evaluation and is exactly like the studies said (those were more positive, remember?).

  • @mikeb2939
    @mikeb2939 Год назад

    I get that some people like it but not for me. I just see cars as something of a burden that you have to maintain. Dream is to live in a country with great public transit or super cheap taxi fares, and never drive again unless I want a weekend rental.

  • @demilishing
    @demilishing Год назад

    I think in large part this video is representative of how people drive their cars. Governing out my parents minivan as a kid gave me a similar thrill to surpassing those speeds on my daily commute to work. Important aspect to life, have fun, no matter what you're doing or how you're doing it. You decide how you're going to interpret stimulus.

  • @trs8696
    @trs8696 Год назад

    it'd be kind of hard to run a car on a desert island for an extended period of time

  • @scf1151
    @scf1151 Год назад

    I had a BMW 330i and while it wasn’t super luxury I enjoyed driving it more then the VW Golf we currently own, however it wasn’t enough to justify the price of it. Cool vid

  • @davidoff7312
    @davidoff7312 Год назад +18

    My luxury vehicle is a bike and I enjoy the financial freedom of not owning a car.

    • @pokiblue5870
      @pokiblue5870 Год назад

      Theres so many brands orbea, canyon, trek, bianchi, cannondale, pinarello…i cant choose my mid-high tier road bike 🤯 too many choices, but one thing for sure ill never buy a car. With gaz going up in price no thanks.

    • @alvadagansta
      @alvadagansta Год назад

      If you forgo owning a car, you save $805.50 a month on average. That's enough for avocado toasts every single meal every single day.

    • @Team.Bull.Trading
      @Team.Bull.Trading Год назад

      Wʜᴀsᴀᴘᴘ ᴍᴇ^^^👆

  • @XanderDDS
    @XanderDDS Год назад +12

    probably not worth it..... but it does remind me of the joke where the prius says to the lamborghini 'i get 52 miles per gallon, what do you get?' and the lamborghini responds: 'laid.'

    • @aw55550
      @aw55550 Год назад +1

      "Badum tsss"

    • @kage-fm
      @kage-fm Год назад +8

      getting laid because of your car is probably one of the loneliest experiences a person can have

    • @bjohns347347
      @bjohns347347 Год назад +2

      I doubt there are very many people who got laid solely because of their car.

    • @ichkommentiernurkommentare7237
      @ichkommentiernurkommentare7237 Год назад

      @@bjohns347347 There's definitely a lot of people who got laid solely because of their car 😂

    • @maxmastter
      @maxmastter Год назад +1

      I know a girl, who only slept with a guy because of a car he drove. It depends from people values.

  • @georgezuwala7075
    @georgezuwala7075 9 месяцев назад +1

    2005 toyota echo paid off cheap, reliable and I really don't care but some industries do require a vehicle that represents it. Buffet is the master of what a frugal life means long term. Don't lease it is a waste of money.

  • @cirodirosa6752
    @cirodirosa6752 Год назад +1

    Great Vid.
    My vehicle is a luxury vehicle.
    I don't have to scoop the poop and I have 185 horses... I think that leap was sufficient for me!

  • @svezanovac2
    @svezanovac2 Год назад +3

    best car in the world is the company car.

  • @MrMasterNorris
    @MrMasterNorris Год назад

    More videos like this please

  • @TomWallischh
    @TomWallischh Год назад +2

    Driving a Tesla and feeling the acceleration hits different than this video suggests. Worth it!

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад

      Meh, it becomes normal fast.

  • @benjaminscello4623
    @benjaminscello4623 7 месяцев назад +4

    I sort of enjoy the idea of maximizing the incongruence between myself and my car. Looking poor but not being it is kind of fun.

    • @newstuff1107
      @newstuff1107 4 месяца назад

      Oh I am so with you on that one.

  • @xavlar4144
    @xavlar4144 Год назад

    “So I should get a used car?!?” lol impeccable timing with today’s CPI report

  • @kbrizy7490
    @kbrizy7490 Год назад

    Really depends on if you enjoy driving or not. MOST people don’t really enjoy the driving in and of itself.
    In my case, I volunteer to drive people places bc it’s pleasurable to me. I can get fun out of an economy car, but it’s definitely increasingly more enjoyable the sportier the car.
    There’s probably a limit to that of course, but I haven’t found it yet. Money is scarce like you said, haha.
    Fun video anyways.

  • @matts2488
    @matts2488 10 месяцев назад +1

    The problem with this video from the outset is failure to define “luxury” which is subject to the extreme.

  • @JoachimMilan1
    @JoachimMilan1 Год назад +9

    Going in to this video, the great surprise would be: "Yes!! Totally worth it!"

  • @AAkCN1
    @AAkCN1 Год назад +1

    Excellent work as always. Never cease to amaze me

  • @jeffmather5594
    @jeffmather5594 Год назад +5

    Love it. Here in Hong Kong, it’s a perfect example of trying to keep up with your neighbour to the point where everyone is driving crazy expensive cars. Teslas are now mediocre, it seems. I drive a plain old VW golf proudly. BTW, Ben, your Chinese pronunciation could use some work. ‘Xu’ in Chinese is pronounced like ‘shoe’ - there’s no j sound anywhere.

    • @johnsmith-ir1ne
      @johnsmith-ir1ne Год назад +4

      Why would you buy a car in HK
      Just use public transit

  • @robertoaron0508
    @robertoaron0508 Год назад

    Spot on!

  • @OurCognitiveSurplus
    @OurCognitiveSurplus Год назад +9

    As someone who drives an exotic sports car, I love every second.

    • @whydoncha
      @whydoncha Год назад

      That's what I figured xD

  • @SterlingRMorris
    @SterlingRMorris Год назад +5

    As someone who has owned both, I like luxury vehicles for the safety and comfort they provide that I didn't feel we could get as easily elsewhere. We're on our third luxury vehicle, buying them all with cash, used, and all way less than those averages cited at $30K and $40K averages. I prefer driving a slightly older, well-built luxury vehicle over a slightly newer standard vehicle with fewer safety and comfort options. I see no need to change.

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад +1

      A run of the mill Toyota is often safer than many luxury brands. No idea where you weirdos get your safety perceptions from.

    • @LG123ABC
      @LG123ABC 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@zvxcvxczBoring!

  • @Mike-fn7rx
    @Mike-fn7rx Год назад +5

    My dream is not a luxury car but a enough land so I can ride go karts on my property. :p My own track would be awesome.

  • @bad_writer
    @bad_writer Год назад +5

    Last week I was visiting LA, and while exploring the city I ended up walking through very fancy neighborhoods Monte Mar Vista and Cheviot Hills. According to Wikipedia, "Cheviot Hills has long been home to many actors, television personalities, and studio executives." To give some more context, for a bit I walked behind a family who were out to walk their dog, where the father was telling his son about a young guy whom "he hired from Goldman Sachs". That's the type of neighborhood we're talking. Each house must be $5mil minimum. I saw lots of cars parked next to all these amazing houses, and barely any of them were luxury brands. I saw one Porsche, maybe one Mercedes. Most of them were Volvo's, Hondas, Nissan's, mostly SUV's and crossovers. Maybe there was a Lambo or a Ferrari in every closed garage that I couldn't see, but judging by the cars visible from the outside - those people with real wealth do not waste money on luxury cars at all.

    • @jc-fy1wl
      @jc-fy1wl Год назад +4

      Those cars belong to the help. Nannies, housekeepers etc.

    • @spritspex7502
      @spritspex7502 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@jc-fy1wl You're probably wrong.
      If you work in risk management, which is one of the "easier" ways to become wealthy through banking (there's a reason most millionaires are engineers) the level of flat-out retarded you have to be to get a Porsche instead of a Volvo is hard to wrap your head around.

  • @samsonsoturian6013
    @samsonsoturian6013 Год назад +3

    There's another channel run by a guy who runs a luxury car rental place and he's full of stories about what happens when people drive luxury cars. Hint: It involves a lot of tire burnouts, a lot of scams, and a lot bad money decisions.

  • @smartandsimpleSNS
    @smartandsimpleSNS Год назад

    Why don't you upload any more?

  • @P3T3R2012
    @P3T3R2012 Год назад +3

    2:53 hahahaha

  • @frozenintime
    @frozenintime Год назад

    I prefer bicycling and walk.

  • @quantumC0d3
    @quantumC0d3 Год назад

    A video on things that make people persistently happy would be very informative.

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Год назад +1

      Investing in Happiness
      ruclips.net/video/iNZk-N6uDcg/видео.html

  • @ssd431
    @ssd431 Год назад +3

    I have luxury vehicles in video games 😌

    • @chrisf1600
      @chrisf1600 Год назад

      Good point, if I've got the choice in GTA5 i'll always take the sports car :)

  • @joaocarvalho1979
    @joaocarvalho1979 7 месяцев назад

    This study is regarding luxury vehicles. A sport rocket like the 992 GT3 RS is not included in this equation guys 😂

  • @nerdcave0
    @nerdcave0 Год назад +1

    'Would you still want X if you lived alone on a desert island?' is a great thought exercise for any possession.

  • @misterr2359
    @misterr2359 Год назад

    I enjoy luxury/fast cars but my focus has changed since I became an investor ('19). My car is a 13/14 that is paid and cost me 25% of my anual net income. Car in Brazil is very expensive, a lot more than in the US/Canada. Don't plan on changing it any time soon and I'm very happy with it.

  • @robinimpey101
    @robinimpey101 Год назад +2

    Agree 100%. At one point I owned a 1989 Jaguar and it was great, and at one point I owned a 1971 VW camper van, that regularly left me stranded, and it too was great. But without a doubt the VW contributed more to happiness and happy events than the Jaguar.

  • @rickyli307
    @rickyli307 Год назад +6

    lol I was literally deciding whether to buy a Lexus or Hyundai last week, ended up choosing Hyundai, and loved to see your video confirming my choice!

    • @NickOloteo
      @NickOloteo Год назад +1

      Why not buy a Toyota since Lexus IS owned by them?

    • @9785633425657
      @9785633425657 Год назад

      Huyndai makes good cars nowadays, but Lexuses are good choice too, especially used ones are a bargain.

    • @AntiHaze
      @AntiHaze Год назад

      You cross-shopped a Lexus and a Hyundai? That’s… bizarre. Any particular models behind the reason you narrowed it down to those two?

    • @maxmastter
      @maxmastter Год назад

      Lexus is not a luxury vehicle. It’s slightly better Toyota. With low cost fabrics, plastic instead of aluminum. All the money goes on advertising and margins. Try to compare similarly priced Lexus LX with GLS or X7. It should cost at least half of the price of the Germans cars. In such case you made good choice buying Hyundai at least you didn’t overpay for your car.

    • @9785633425657
      @9785633425657 Год назад +1

      @@maxmastter I agree with the statement that “Lexus is not a luxury vehicle”, but BMW and Mercedes also is not. Those are just premium brands. Luxury is Maybach, Bentley, Rolls Royce and Aston Martin

  • @robertchaplin
    @robertchaplin Год назад

    The is an old saying: you never buy liabilities. For example luxury cars, big homes, expensive holidays, etc. as against say for example inspected used cars with some guarantees, etc. It is simple to calculate costs and compare say the monthly cost of the luxury purchase including depreciation and possible investment returns on the extra moneys involved. The book rich man poor man comes to to mind also.

  • @Hoodie89NL
    @Hoodie89NL Год назад +4

    Can you do a similar video in the future about 'are bigger homes worth it?' Maybe you find literature with an "optimal" average surface area per person for different households. With my personal thougt that houses in the US are in general way too big (as seen in media, I am Dutch)

    • @BenFelixCSI
      @BenFelixCSI  Год назад +1

      I do touch on that here ruclips.net/video/q9Golcxjpi8/видео.html

  • @AndreaPasqualiniMe
    @AndreaPasqualiniMe Год назад

    I have diesel 2009 volkswagen Polo, I do not want a new luxury car. But some safety tech are very useful, especially with kids... Not to mention reliability and maintainance, that is hard to find on cheap cars. Moreover, my car cannot enter in some city like Milan (italy) due to pollution policy. A good alternative should be a Toyota Yaris, but right now cost more than 18k. CRAZY!!

  • @pradhyudh
    @pradhyudh Год назад

    u will understand the difference in longer durations when u drive them back to back or sports cars on a track ,the theory of marginal utility applies here and its really not worth it

  • @christianD12
    @christianD12 Год назад +7

    Let’s be honest here, the true joy of a vehicle is only felt by those who enjoy driving and care about the experience. A normal person who uses their car to get from A to B and doesn’t care much about what it looks like, how it drives or how fast it goes won’t care about a luxury vehicle. But someone who enjoys to drive, wants to drive fast and looks forward to driving will greatly enjoy something with say 300 horsepower compared to a Toyota Camry.

    • @theoriginalstinger
      @theoriginalstinger Год назад +1

      You can actually get a Camry with 300 horsepower these days.

    • @christianD12
      @christianD12 Год назад +1

      @@theoriginalstinger yeah, and it costs as much as a luxury car like a BMW or Mercedes. Lol

    • @maxmastter
      @maxmastter Год назад

      @@theoriginalstinger yes but you can’t use those horses since it doesn’t turn right or have decent breaks

    • @zvxcvxcz
      @zvxcvxcz 10 месяцев назад

      Horsepower isn't all it's cracked up to be. The Lotus Elise, Mazda Miata, and Toyota 86 are all true drivers cars and didn't need 300 horsepower to earn their reputations. None of them would really be described as a luxury vehicle either.