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dr. CS (Clement) Bellet

Biography

My work bridges behavioral economics and marketing research, focusing on three key areas at the intersection of business and society: 

  1. Gender Representation and Consumer Stereotypes: I analyze gender dynamics in advertising, consumer stereotypes, and market segmentation using large-scale data and experiments.
  2. Conspicuous Consumption and Inequality: I examine how inequality shapes consumer preferences, luxury markets, and status signaling.
  3. Customer and Worker Well-Being: I study emotional labor in customer interactions, leveraging proprietary telecom data to understand the link between customer satisfaction, worker well-being and firm performance.

By uncovering the social determinants of consumer preferences, I aim to inform marketing strategies and policy interventions. My work has been published in Management Science, the Journal of Public Economics or the Journal of the European Economic Association.

Erasmus School of Economics

Associate professor | Marketing
Email
bellet@ese.eur.nl

More information

Work

  • Clement S. Bellet & Eve Colson-Sihra (2025) - - Journal of the European Economic Association, 23 (4), 1272-1308 - doi: -
  • Clement S. Bellet, David Dubois & Frederic Godart (2025) - - Management Science, 71 (6), 4915-4941 - doi:
  • Clement S. Bellet (2024) - - Journal of Public Economics, 238 - doi: -
  • Clément S. Bellet, Jan Emmanuel De Neve & George Ward (2024) - - Management Science, 70 (3), 1656-1679 - doi: -

    • Dainis Zegners, Sebastian Gabel, Dominik Gutt, Clement Bellet, Murat Tunc & Shrabastee Banerjee (2025) - Workshop on Digital Markets (WDM) (Organiser)
      Activity: Attending an event › Academic

    Year
    2025
    Course Code
    FEB22018

    Year
    2025
    Course Code
    FEB22018X

    Year
    2025
    Course Code
    FEM11153

    Year
    2025
    Course Code
    TIC20899

    ÃÀÅ®¸£ÀûµçÓ°ÔºÎçÒ¹ regarding dr. CS (Clement) Bellet

    Comparison is the thief of joy, the case of bigger houses

    Clément Bellet, Assistant Professor in the field of marketing at Erasmus School of Economics, explains this mechanism in The Washington Post.

    Men are most stereotypically depicted in TV advertisements compared to women

    While advertisers occasionally challenge how women are represented in advertisements, men remain confined to traditional stereotypes.  

    Bigger isn't always better: The hidden costs of oversized homes

    Clément Bellet, Assistant Professor at Erasmus School of Economics, explores the paradox of McMansions.

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