ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2026, Vol. 58 ›› Issue (2): 247-263.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2026.0247 cstr: 32110.14.2026.0247

• “社会治理视角下经济处境的心理影响及其干预策略”专栏 • 上一篇    下一篇

想成功又想躺平:经济不平等引发的冲突后效及其作用机制

茆家焱1, 杨沈龙2, 田彩玉3   

  1. 1阿姆斯特丹自由大学实验与应用心理学系, 阿姆斯特丹 1081 BT, 荷兰;
    2西安交通大学人文社会科学学院社会心理学研究所, 西安 710049;
    3肯特大学心理学院, 坎特伯雷 CT2 7NP, 英国
  • 收稿日期:2024-12-30 发布日期:2025-12-03 出版日期:2026-02-25
  • 通讯作者: 杨沈龙, E-mail: yangsl@mail.xjtu.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金青年项目(72001171)、教育部人文社会科学研究青年基金项目(24YJC190039)、中央高校基本科研业务费专项科研项目(SK2025021)资助

Desire for success but “lying flat”: The conflicting consequences of economic inequality and its mechanisms

MAO Jia-Yan1, YANG Shen-Long2, TIAN Cai-Yu3   

  1. 1Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, VU Amsterdam, Amsterdam 1081 BT, The Netherlands;
    2School of Humanities and Social Science, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China;
    3School of Psychology, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NP, United Kingdom
  • Received:2024-12-30 Online:2025-12-03 Published:2026-02-25

摘要: 以往研究发现经济不平等可以使个体更渴求财富与地位, 但是这种需求能否转化为个体现实的努力行动还有待揭示。本研究通过6个子研究发现了经济不平等引发的心理后效的冲突性, 即一方面促进财富地位渴求, 但另一方面则激发了躺平倾向。研究1和研究2基于相关法, 显示经济不平等可以预测这种冲突的后效, 而且发现它预测财富地位渴求是基于地位焦虑的中介作用, 它预测躺平倾向是基于控制感的中介作用。研究3和研究4 (包括4a和4b)则通过实验法, 为上述两个后效及其中介机制提供了因果的证据。考虑到躺平倾向的消极性, 研究5进一步探索潜在的调节变量, 并发现社会流动感知可以调节经济不平等通过控制感预测躺平倾向的中介关系。研究不仅延伸了过往该领域的发现, 同时揭示了经济不平等引发的冲突性后果及其作用机制, 还为缓解感知不平等的消极结果提供了新的视角, 对于激发个人努力、促进畅通的社会流动有一定的启示。

关键词: 经济不平等, 财富地位渴求, 躺平倾向, 地位焦虑, 控制感, 社会流动感知

Abstract: Economic inequality is a significant barrier to social development and the achievement of “common prosperity”. While it is also known to drive individuals’ aspirations for wealth and status, there is limited empirical research exploring this relationship. The current research aimed to investigate how economic inequality influences the desire for wealth and status, as well as its underlying mechanisms. Meanwhile, the growing phenomenon of “lying flat” — a lifestyle choice of minimal effort and rejection of societal pressures to overwork or overachieve — challenges these aspirations. Could “lying flat” be a response to economic inequality? If so, it may suggest that the motivational effects of inequality on wealth and status are subjective and do not always translate into actual behavior. We also examined how economic inequality shapes tendencies toward “lying flat”, exploring the mechanisms and boundary conditions that influence the dual psychological outcomes of desire for wealth and status versus the tendency to subscribe to the “lying flat” lifestyle.
To address these issues, we conducted two correlational studies (Studies 1 and 2) and four experimental studies (Studies 3, 4a, 4b, and 5). Studies 1 and 2 explored the relationships between economic inequality, desire for wealth and status, and the “lying flat” lifestyle through cross-sectional surveys of student and general population samples. Study 3 examined the mediating role of status anxiety in the relationship between economic inequality and the desire for wealth and status using manipulations of the perceived inequality. Studies 4a and 4b investigated the mediating role of perceived control between economic inequality and the “lying flat” lifestyle with two different manipulations — one based on the description of real-world inequality and the other on a virtual context. Study 5 tested the moderating effect of perceived social mobility in the “economic inequality → perceived control → lying flat” path. All studies were conducted with mainland Chinese samples.
Studies 1 and 2 found that economic inequality had a positive correlation with both the desire for wealth and status and the “lying flat” lifestyle. Study 2 showed that status anxiety mediated the relationship between economic inequality and the desire for wealth and status, while perceived control mediated the relationship between economic inequality and “lying flat”. Study 3 further verified the “economic inequality → status anxiety → desire for wealth and status” path and once again proved that status anxiety plays a mediating role between economic inequality and the desire for wealth and status based on experimental design. Similarly, Study 4 (including Studies 4a and 4b) verified the “economic inequality → perceived control → lying flat” path and experimentally reaffirmed the mediating role of perceived control between economic inequality and “lying flat”. Study 5 revealed that perceived social mobility moderated the relationship between economic inequality and perceived control, as well as the mediating model of “economic inequality → perceived control → lying flat”. Specifically, participants with a higher perception of social mobility showed higher perceived control even at higher levels of economic inequality.
This research replicated the positive effect of economic inequality on the desire for wealth and status, identifying status anxiety as a mediator. It deepens our understanding of the societal consequences of economic inequality. Additionally, we explored how perceived control mediates the relationship between economic inequality and the “lying flat” lifestyle, analyzing the mechanisms behind this contradiction. Finally, we examined the potential of perceived social mobility to mitigate this psychological state. This research provides new insights into the effects of economic inequality and explores practical measures to address the “lying flat” lifestyle, supporting the goal of “common prosperity”.

Key words: economic inequality, desire for wealth and status, “lying flat”, status anxiety, perceived control, perception of social mobility

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