by Jesse Kim
One of the
things I’ve been noticing during my bi-yearly visits back to Korea is the growing
domination of high-fashion brands on the streets. It’s becoming just as common
to see middle-aged women with Louis Vuitton purses as teenage boys with Gucci
shoulder bags. Do Koreans just happen to be fashionistas as a collective nation,
or is there something more to this phenomenon? To make matters more puzzling,
those elite brand products, which already command an astounding price, tend to cost
even more in Korea especially relative to their living costs. For me, a simple
attribution to luxurious taste in fashion does not fare well in explaining why there
are so many Korean eighteen year olds expecting a three thousand dollar purse
for Christmas.
Granted, I’ve
always been aware that premium pricing is a huge part of the fashion industry
in Korea. I even remember watching a news interview as a little girl that
featured a storeowner who admitted that simply adding a zero at the end of the
price tag of a dress boosts its sales. This excited me because she seemed to
have just exposed a big secret: “price doesn’t always represent quality”; though
I did eventually realize that most people were already aware of this fact. Then
why is it that premium pricing continues to play such a potent role in increasing
perceived brand value, especially for high fashion brands, and how come it’s
more potent in some places, like Korea, than others, like Canada?
When considering
brand equity as the difference in value of a product with a brand and the same
product without the brand, the comparison between my trusty old fifty dollar
purse and my cousin’s three-thousand dollar Gucci purse shows the brand equity of
such high fashion brands to be enormous. It’s obvious that brands such as Coach and
Chanel enjoy considerable brand equity around the globe, but my experience
tells me that it seems to be more evident in some places than others. It
could be that in some countries, fashion brands are simply valued more due to their country-of-origin desirability. It might also be that some cultures value highest priced goods more as a symbolic device. In any event, the relationship between the brand and the high prices has some sort of equilibrium: the high prices are imposed to help create the brand equity; the intangible benefits of the brand justify the higher prices.
I still can’t
shake the strange feeling that I get while watching a 9 year old
Korean girl trot to school with her mini Louis Vuitton backpack and a Burberry
scarf. But by accepting that different places may have different attitudes
regarding brands, I can view these seemingly "wasteful" tendencies as an
interesting cultural brand phenomenon taking place, rather than the result of
the brands’ exploitation of superficiality.
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