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old Lean in, Barbie

oxytamine
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BARBIE has been busy. What is perhaps surprising is that the price of a doll varies by profession. Most in the “Barbie I can be…” collection cost $ 13.99, according to its maker, Mattel, and Amazon. But some, like “computer engineer” or “snowboarder” can fetch two or three times more. This can’t simply be explained by the cheap accessories that come with it - why should a miniature plastic laptop be valued so much higher than a chef’s tiny cupcakes?

Matthew Notowidigdo, an economist at the University of Chicago, calls it the “Barbie Paradox,” an idea popularized by his colleague Emily Oster in an article last year in Slate. They conclude that price discrimination is probably at work: sellers exploit parental hopes that a girl playing palaeontologist may grow up to be the real thing, so charge more. And the white collar professions certainly assuage criticisms from the early 1990s when Mattel released talking Barbies that groused “Math class is tough” (which inspired The Economist to publish an in-depth analysis of the pint-sized princess in 2002). Interestingly, there is only a modest correlation between Barbie’s occupations and real-world salaries. Inexpensive pilot dolls are paid quite a lot in life, and despite babysitter Barbie’s moderately high price, she would take home a pittance as a childcare worker.

IMG:https://www.newsnshit.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/e7b71__20130330_gdc322_0.png


Discuss.

old Re: Lean in, Barbie

palomino
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You pretty much said it. Parents buy their children engineer dolls in hopes that their kid will be inspired by it. Just that peole don't realize that dolls only can't make a child achieve more, if their parents are chavs, for example, a doll won't do much.
And about the babysitter dolls - girls like the idea of taking care of a child so the company just exploits this notion and sells babysitter dolls for more.

old Re: Lean in, Barbie

Time
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Turns out, the aim of this thread is not obvious enough for some. Not that I'm surprised.

Discuss.

old Re: Lean in, Barbie

palomino
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user Time has written
Turns out, the aim of this thread is not obvious enough for some. Not that I'm surprised.

It was very obvious. However, if the thread author really wants to discuss it (which is unlikely) - then why not actually say what you think on the topic instead of just posting something unnecessary? Like, for example:
user oxytamine has written
Your no-sense threads again. Have you posted this to your Facebook? Twitter? YouTube? Tumblr?

or
user oxytamine has written
Whole thread is shitpost, you just spam.

old Re: Lean in, Barbie

Ahmad
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Now days it's rare to see a kid playing with a doll, they play with ipods.

old Re: Lean in, Barbie

Apfelbrot
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user Ahmad has written
Now days it's rare to see a kid playing with a doll, they play with ipods.

They're almost like dolls, aren't they?...
When she was younger my sister always wanted to get dolls, but only because their clothes where sparkling. Poor dolls where always naked.
edited 1×, last 17.05.13 06:27:21 pm

old Re: Lean in, Barbie

Doberman
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user Ahmad has written
Now days it's rare to see a kid playing with a doll, they play with ipods.

It's rare to see parents which aren't lazy bastards.
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