Conspicuous Little Consumers
By Kelly Sharp, Texas Observer
Posted on February 13, 2006, Printed
on February 13, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/31891/
Juliet Schor's latest book,
Born to Buy: The Commercialized
Child and the New Consumer Culture,
represents the culmination of many
things: her training as an economist
and sociologist, her ongoing
analysis of consumer culture in
previous books (The
Overworked American: The Unexpected
Decline of Leisure and
The Overspent American: Upscaling,
Downshifting and the New Consumer),
and her own experience as a mother.
Born to Buy examines the
increased involvement of children in
consumer culture, specifically as
targets of advertising, and the
resulting effect on their
well-being. Schor balances her
well-researched presentation of
rather alarming data with a voice
that is not alarmist, but practical,
informative, and readable.
In many ways her conclusion comes
as no surprise. Readers may be
surprised, however, by her data --
namely, the sheer volume of
marketing to which children are
exposed. According to Schor, the
advertising industry spent $100
million on marketing to children in
1983; by 2004 that amount had
increased to $15 billion.
Advertisements saturate television,
radio, and print media. More
disturbing, however, is the extent
to which marketers have infiltrated
schools, the Internet, airplanes,
restrooms, and essentially every
other public space available.
These ads are the product of some
of the finest anthropological
research and creative thinking in
the marketing business. Techniques
such as anti-adultism, which pits
children against adults in the
struggle for marketed goods, and age
compression, which targets children
of younger and younger ages, combine
with all the traditionally
manipulative advertising techniques
to create a culture in which
children do not merely consume, but
also find their identity in
consumption.
The effect on children's
psychological, physical, and social
health is, predictably, deplorable.
Schor notes the dramatic increase in
incidences of depression, anxiety,
low self-esteem, obesity, and
psychosomatic disorders.
With their characteristically
underestimated precociousness,
children are not wholly unaware of
this trend. Before I spoke with
Juliet Schor, I ate lunch with
children at the school where I
teach. I explained to them that I
was interviewing a woman who had
written a book saying that children
today saw more commercials than ever
before. I asked them if they thought
it was true.
"Well, yeah," they shrugged.
"They're everywhere on the
television and the computer." They
went back to their lunch: chips in
flashy containers, yogurt with movie
characters on the package, and
sweets upon sweets.
What is it, compared to
children's advertising in the past
or to adult advertising, that makes
marketing to children so dangerous
now?
Juliet Schor: Well,
there's the volume. The sort or
extent of media and ad exposure has
increased enormously, along with the
amount of stuff that kids have. It's
taking over a greater and greater
volume of kids' time use,
activities, mental space, and
physical space. It's the shift
towards getting into very basic
processes of identity and social
connection and esteem, which is new.
Who is responsible for
regulating this marketing
phenomenon?
A lot depends on the ad. If it's
going on television, the network has
an office within it. There's a
so-called self-regulation, a set of
industry guidelines that companies
say they adhere to, but in fact
compliance is not that great and
there's a very limited apparatus for
enforcement of those guidelines. In
any case, they're not binding.
I saw a study from the CARU,
Children's Advertising Review Unit,
which is part of the Better Business
Bureau, showing that CARU claims
they have 97 percent compliance,
which is bogus. There are no
penalties for not complying, the
companies say they're complying and
they're not. Sham may be too strong
a word, but there are some sham
aspects to it, particularly recently
when you've had a lot of changing
practices and a lot of competition
in the industry. Television ads are
the most regulated part of
[children's advertising]. When you
start getting out of TV, although
CARU is nominally covering it, it
has a small staff, and the volume of
kids' ads is enormous. They
basically are reacting to complaints
that are brought to them. But there
are not that many complaints because
there's no formal body that's
reviewing all these ads.
Can consumers make those
complaints?
Yes, yes. You can also complain
directly to the companies, and I
think that's something to really
push with your readership. When the
public gets involved and complains
we see a lot of cases where we're
getting companies' response.
You describe general
guidelines. With toys they have to
show the toys in realistic settings
for a certain amount of time in the
commercial. This cuts down on overt
exaggerations; they can't advertise
a costume cape and show a kid flying
because that can't actually happen.
But does this standard in some way
make advertisements more insidious?
If an ad has to be believable to a
certain extent, does that make the
message subtler and more
manipulative?
I think it really depends. For
the little kids, I think that those
flashy claims are really powerful,
but for the older kids that won't
work. They know that you can't fly
just because you put a cape on. I
think the point is that the whole
regulatory system is responding to
the techniques of yesteryear, which
were to show products doing
miraculous things they can't do to
try and get kids to want them.
That's not the way advertising is
done today.
Today, we see the rise of
symbolic messaging, which means it's
less about the product than about
the social meaning and the symbolism
of the product. So, you say: This
product makes you cool. Now, I think
a good case could be made to CARU
and the companies that that's
magical thinking, that's fantasy,
but they haven't interpreted it that
way. They interpret it in such a
narrow and strict way. But the
symbolic messages I would say are
more powerful than the messages
which are about "Wow, look. This
product can do this amazing stuff!"
So the method is: This cape,
sure it won't actually make you fly,
but it will make you happy -- that's
just as fantastical, really.
It's a really important point,
which hasn't really come out in the
debates the way it needs to.
And yet, the industry asserts
that they empower kids through
marketing. What is their basic
argument for why what they do is
beneficial to kids, or at least not
harmful?
Actually there are a lot who are
unhappy and uneasy with what they're
doing. That came out of my own
research and also in a survey that
was done of kids' marketers in which
many of them expressed reservations,
although they mostly pointed at
other people -- "My colleagues,
they're the problem," and so forth.
The major line of defense is "We
need to make money." In some way
this goes without saying, but it
should be said because what it shows
is a pernicious and instrumental
relationship to kids. Now, their two
other biggest lines of defense are,
[firstly], that the problems are
really coming from parents -- but
this is kind of an incoherent
argument.
I mean let's say junk food: It
doesn't let you off the hook to be
pushing it just because you can also
point to another actor in the chain
of events who is doing something
wrong. The idea that they are
empowering kids is a more complex
one, and a more defensible one in
the following sense: The idea that
kids should get to be consumers,
that they should have commercials
and products oriented to them and
that they like; all of those things
I agree with. One of my marketer
informants said to me in a
discussion of all this research,
"Well, do you think it would be
better if we made products that kids
didn't want or like?" My answer to
that is no; but it's easy to get
kids to want stuff that's not good
for them and you need a balance
between that empowerment and the
messages and products [themselves]
and I think that balance is missing.
As a teacher -- and in your
case as a parent -- I agree it is
important to give kids autonomy and
choices, but at the same time
they're kids, and they're not making
choices with the same resources we
have available to us.
There are people who argue you
shouldn't do any advertising to kids
because they have a hard time
processing and resisting it. They
aren't really up to it in some
pretty fundamental way. I think
that's a reasonable point of view.
It partly depends on the age you're
talking about. What's curious is in
the survey that was done of
marketers that I mentioned earlier,
most of the marketers didn't differ
too much from the child
psychologists on when they thought
kids could really resist the
persuasive intent of advertising;
the marketers say 11-and-a-half
years and the child psychologists
say 12 years.
So one question is whether you
think there should be a sort of
fairness as law. The two key
principles of advertising law are
deceptiveness and fairness. Well,
they're violating deceptiveness all
the time. That's become a huge
business, deceptive advertising,
whether we're talking product
placement or word of mouth
advertising, stealth advertising in
school, or curricula advertising.
The second question: Is it fair
to advertise to kids, do they have
the ability to withstand the pull of
the advertisement? The research
suggests that kids below 12 have
limited abilities to do that and the
younger you get the more limited and
impaired they are in understanding
what an ad is and [its] purpose.
That's a huge issue that the
industry refuses to confront. When
it says we're just empowering kids,
it's making that argument in the
face of a significant body of
scholarly literature that casts
doubt on the basic enterprise.
And yet, as they claim, they
can't be held entirely responsible.
One marketing technique is to
respond to kids' stress—how is it
that other adults, including parents
and teachers, help unwittingly
create a situation in which kids are
vulnerable to advertising messages?
Well, I'm not sure we understand
all the aspects of childhood stress
today, but certainly adults have set
up the institutions and practices
that children exist in to a large
extent. One thing that seems like a
part of it to me is the very high
expectations placed on kids for
achievement in many different
arenas; I think also just the way
they're being brought up.
There's something about the way
kids are living today that's leading
to much higher levels of stress.
Whatever it is, it's something about
the way we have constructed the
world; it's not a natural fact.
Stress levels have gone up so much
-- it's not just part of the human
condition.
We all grow up with negative
outside influences, no matter what
they are, and yet if we're lucky, at
some point we become self aware and
discerning enough to sort through
them. Considering that we can't
totally censor everything kids are
exposed to, how is it that we can
help give them the tools to process
consumer culture so that ultimately
they can be happy and healthy,
despite everything that's around
them?
What I've tried to do in my own
life is de-commercialize the
household. I think that's a really
key part of it. Turning off the TV
and other media is key. Secondly,
diet: not eating junk food, so
you're cooking tasty, nutritious
food. Eating together as a family,
having a strong family life is
important. And the third thing I
talk about is reclaiming the
outdoors for kids. If kids have to
be indoors it's very difficult to
limit the media exposure. Especially
with the young ones where you just
need too much adult time.
One of the big differences
between the way kids are growing up
today and the way generations in the
past did is that, in the past, kids
had more access to the outdoors on
their own. And that's really key. It
allows them to create peer networks,
to interact with each other, to have
independence—all of those things
that are necessary for growing up to
be a good and healthy person.
There isn't a magic answer to it,
but basically you create a good
healthy environment for the whole
family. And then try to do the same
thing in your schools and other
institutions |