Children 'damaged' by materialism
BBC News
February 26, 2008
Most adults in the UK believe that children's well-being
is being damaged because childhood has become too
commercial, a lifestyle poll has found.
Some 89% of adults in the GfK NOP survey of 1,255 people
believed today's children were more materialistic than
previous generations.
The poll is one of the contributions to a continuing
inquiry into childhood.
The Children's Society said adults had to "take
responsibility for the current level of marketing to
children".
Bob Reitemeier, chief executive of the society, said: "A
crucial question raised by the inquiry is whether
childhood should be a space where developing minds are
free from concentrated sales techniques.
"To accuse children of being materialistic in such a
culture is a cop-out," he said.
"Children should be encouraged to value themselves for
who they are as people rather than what they own" - Dr
Rowan Williams
Mr Reitemeier said: "Unless we question our own
behaviour as a society we risk creating a generation who
are left unfulfilled through chasing unattainable
lifestyles."
The children's market is worth an estimated £30bn a
year.
As chief executive of the National Schools Partnership,
Mark Fawcett brings business and marketing into schools,
and he believes you cannot shield children from the real
world.
"We have to live in the current communications era where
children can see a huge amount of information," he told
BBC TV news.
"We have to use our judgement and we have to, as an
industry, make sure we are working with children and
families, and not exploiting them."
Selling lifestyles
HAVE YOUR SAY Parents should be stronger at refusing the
ridiculous demands for the latest gear at huge prices
Hayley Smith Rotherham
The evidence on lifestyle is part of a six-part series
of investigations published by the Children's Society
for a continuing inquiry into childhood in the UK which
brings together the views of academics, religious
communities, teachers, local authorities and authors.
Dr. Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, who is
patron of the inquiry, said: "Children should be
encouraged to value themselves for who they are as
people rather than what they own.
"The selling of lifestyles to children creates a culture
of material competitiveness and promotes acquisitive
individualism at the expense of the principles of
community and co-operation."
CHILDHOOD LIFESTYLE POLL
90% agree childhood more materialistic
69% agree violent video games make children more
aggressive
90% believe Christmas advertising puts pressure on
parents to spend more than they can afford
60% believe there should be a government ban on junk
food advertising
One member of the childhood inquiry panel has warned
that the commercial pressures on youngsters may have
damaging psychological effects.
Professor Philip Graham, Emeritus Professor of Child
Psychiatry at the Institute of Child Health in London,
said: "One factor that may be leading to rising mental
health problems is the increasing degree to which
children and young people are preoccupied with
possessions; the latest in fashionable clothes and
electronic equipment.
"Evidence both from the United States and from the UK
suggests that those most influenced by commercial
pressures also show higher rates of mental health
problems," he went on.
Junk food advertising
The poll found that an overwhelming majority, 90%, of
adults thought that advertising to children at Christmas
put pressure on parents to spend more than they can
afford.
Sixty per cent of those questioned believed that
children and young people's self esteem was being
damaged by a negative portrayal of their age group in
the media.
Women in the survey were more likely than men to think
the media was causing the damage, with 63% agreeing,
compared to 56% of men.
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Sixty-nine per cent of the sample thought violent video
games made children more aggressive.
A majority of the adults questioned agreed that the
government should ban advertising of unhealthy food.
One parent who admits to feeling the commercial
pressures of parenthood is Zara Hobley, aged 35.
With three children between the ages of one and four,
Mrs Hobley believes it is important to be able to teach
them about discipline and boundaries.
"We're never going to beat the big companies that push
impressive marketing campaigns but what we can do is
equip ourselves and our children to be able to say no
and not to feel bad about it."
Mrs Hobley said: "As parents we have a responsibility to
teach our children how to cope with materialism. If we
can teach them some kind of responsibility then I think
that will work."
This theme is the fourth in the childhood inquiry; the
previous ones have included friends, family and
learning.
The first theme, published in June 2007, found that
adult anxieties about the modern world were curtailing
children's freedom to play with friends.
Over the next 12 months the inquiry will hold meetings
on the remaining themes of health and values and a final
report will be published in 2009.
