Ethical Consumer at MMU Black Friday 2015
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Transcript of Ethical Consumer at MMU Black Friday 2015
27th November 2015
BLACK FRIDAY
vs
BUY NOTHING DAY
Our Ethical Ratings
- Marketing- Ethical Consumer - Defining Ethics- The Ethical Market- Social Commentary- Citizen not ConsumerDon't forget the competition!
Simon RobinsonEthical Consumer Research Association
What I'm covering today
Black Friday
Amazon
During Black Friday 2014, Amazon achieved its busiest sales day to date with 5.5 million items ordered at a rate of 64 items per second.
In 2014, Amazon paid just £11.9m in corporate taxeson sales of £5.3bn, a rate of less than 0.3%.
Buy Nothing Day
Fat Face
Ethical consumer choices are not new
US President Benjamin Harrison, 1891
“I pity the man who wants a coat so cheap that the man or woman who produces the cloth or shapes it into a garment will starve in the process”
1989 – The year of the birth of Ethical Consumer
About Ethical Consumer
For over 25 years Ethical Consumer has been the heart of the ethical consumer movement. Our mission is to make global business more sustainable through consumer pressure.
Ethical Consumer Research Association is an independent, not-for-profit, multi-stakeholder co-operative with open membership, based in Hulme, Manchester.
Ahead of the curve
Magazine
Magazine
Online
Campaigns
Campaigns
Campaigns
Annual Conference
Best Buy Label
Our best buy label is the last word on ethical labelling, making it even easier to find the products and services that reflect your principles.
Looks in detail at the ethical record of the company behind the product and the environmental and ethical record of the product itself.
Consultancy
Consultancy
How do we define what is ethical?
Our Ethical Ratings
l Environmentl Human Rightsl Animal Rightsl Politicsl Product Sustainabilty
Cocoa
Cotton
Agro-chemicals
Conflict minerals (electronics)
Electronics Assembly
Palm Oil (food, cosmetics, cleaners)
Oil
Oil
Clothing
Cosmetics
In 1998 how many years would it take for a Haitian employee who makes T-shirts for Disney to earn the same money as Disney's CEO makes in one hour?
Disney T-Shirts in Haiti
The Ethical Market
The Ethical Consumer Markets Report has measured the sales of ethical products in the UK every year since 1999.
It also contains survey data asking consumers about their boycott and other ethical behaviours.
Background data now freely available on a big data platform at Leeds University.
Ethical Consumer Markets Report
Since 1999 sales of ethical products have grown far faster than the rest of the economy (10%+ per year).
Ethical Consumer Markets Report
Now accounts for 5% of all consumer spending.
Some markets are becoming dominated by 'ethical products‘ while others remain relatively untouched.
Ethical Consumer Markets Report
Mainstreaming or very fast growth is best achieved by government intervention to encourage the sales of less damaging products. The FIT scheme and microgeneration Sales of A-rated tax band cars
However, the present government appears ideologically opposed towards (some) regulation.
Ethical Consumer Markets Report
Ethical Consumer Markets Report
Mainstreaming or very fast growth can also be achieved when big companies choose to accredit best selling products. Nestle and Fairtrade Kit Kat M&S and Leaping Bunny Sainsbury and Fairtrade bananas
However this can lead to downward pressure on standards at accrediting organisations.
Ethical Consumer Markets Report
Very fast growth can be achieved by ethical companies buying up other companies.
However this is quite risky.
The Co-op Bank's purchase of the Britannia building society turned out not to be the best decision it has ever made.
Not just with ethical companies - Tesco's overseas acquisitions.
Business response: Ethical marketing
Business response: Ethical marketing
Sainsbury's Supermarket Advert UK 2013
Measuring UK ethical markets
Measuring UK consumer boycott impacts
Measuring UK consumer boycott impacts
The Future – politics and regulation
l Consumers are acting to address issues (like child labour) that could also be addressed by government regulation.
l Globalisation of markets can make regulation technicaly difficult.
l Some academics are now using the expression 'civil regulation' to describe these types of ethical consumer intervention.
l Civil regulation is likely to increase if government regulation is not addressing important social and enviromental externalities
l Some academics also use the expression 'political consumption'
l They argue that this form of political activity is increasing because ordinary electoral politics is discredited or struggling.
The Future – politics and regulation
The Future – ethical markets
In 25 Years Time in EuropeAll businesses will be required by law to report on, and articulate, their ethical positions. 'Ethically' certified produce will have come to dominate all major consumer markets – including clothing. Political campaigning and debate will increasing focus on the certification schemes themselves. Serious ethical procurement by governments will become part of the landscape everywhere. Sustainable lifestyles with fewer, higher-quality, products and ubiquitous renewable energy will be the norm.
Social action on consumerism
“Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.”
William Morris 1834-1896
Social Commentary on Consumerism
Black Friday‘The worst scenes were in Greater Manchester, where at least three people were arrested as fighting broke out between shoppers’Daily Telegraph 28.11.14
Dawn of the DeadThe Mall Scene from George A Romero’s classic 1978 horror film
Social Commentary on Consumerism
Social Commentary on Consumerism
Social Commentary on Consumerism
“We buy things we don't need, with money we don't have,
to impress people we don't like”
Dave Ramsey
Social Commentary on Consumerism
“I see all this potential, and I see it squandered. God damn it, an entire generation pumping gas, waiting tables - slaves with white collars.
Advertising has us chasing cars and clothes, working jobs we hate so we can buy shit we don't need. We're the middle children of history, man. No purpose or place.
We have no Great War. No Great Depression. Our great war is a spiritual war... Our great depression is our lives.
We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars, but we won't. We're slowly learning that fact. And we're very, very pissed off.”
Social Commentary on Consumerism
Estimated net worth:
$240m
Irony
Our consumer muscle, which is fed and exercised constantly, has grown strong. So strong that “consumer” has become our primary identity, our reason for being.
Citizens or Consumers?
Meanwhile, our citizen muscle has gotten flabby. There’s no marketing campaign reminding us to engage as citizens.
Annie Leonard
“Ethical Consumerism” is generally limited to choosing the most responsible item on the menu, which often leaves us choosing between the lesser of two evils.
Citizens or Consumers?
Citizenship means working to change what’s on the menu, and stuff that trashes the planet or harms people just doesn’t belong. Annie Leonard
Unleash your creativity and create a Buy Nothing Day 'Sub-vert'
l Posterl Video – links onlyl Poem
Send to:[email protected]
Closes mid-night13
th December
Competition Time
12-month digital subscription
www.ethicalconsumer.org
0161 226 [email protected]
@EC_magazine
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Further information