Advertising Children
ADVERTISING TO CHILDREN
A Brief Review of the Influences that Advertising can have with Children
Advertising plays a substantial role in modern society. Marketing messages have become ubiquitous and can be found in new places all the time. Some of the common sources are TV, radio, billboards, and online ads; however marketing professionals are constantly reinventing the media in can display their messages. For example, new technics such as product placement and tribal marketing allow marketers to send a message that doesn't not always get filtered in the same way that traditional marketing messages would. These messages can permeate an individual's defenses and influence them without them ever being aware of it. Furthermore, the problem is compounded in regard to children. Young children do not have the capacity to be able to put the marketing message in context and thus they are even more vulnerable to advertising than adults. However, marketing to children has also been found to be able to relay positive messages in the same fashion. This paper will provide a brief review of some of the issues that are salient in regards to advertising to children.
Food Advertising in Children
It is argued that children do not have the capacity to effectively differentiate fiction and reality during their development; especially early in their development. Therefore children are especially vulnerable and can be easily influenced by the modern day robust advertisements. Food advertising is a good example of how children can be influenced by marketers. In the U.S. alone, the number of children classified as overweight has doubled in the last couple decades, while the number of overweight adolescents has tripled by rough estimates. The World Health Organization, and an Expert Committee convened by the American Medical Association, has recommended restricting children's consumption of energy-dense foods as a strategy to prevent and treat obesity. To this end, countries such as Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Ireland, Italy, and Sweden all restrict advertising that targets children (McGuire, 2002).
Americans have the lowest-cost food supply in the world and spend the lowest proportion of disposable income on food and until fairly recently, few have seriously questioned whether a low-cost food supply brought anything but social benefits to the United States (Drewnoski & Darmon, 2005). The efficiency and low cost of foods produced in the U.S. are a result of greater production yields, higher surplus rates, and in some cases there are massive farm subsidies paid to farmers from public funding which in turn artificially drive the prices of many different types of food products. Unfortunately such market interventions have artificially lowered the prices of some of the unhealthiest foods in the U.S.
Despite the perceived benefits of having access to inexpensive foods, the reality is that this situation may not be as beneficial as previously assumed. Roughly two-thirds of U.S. adults are overweight or obese and in general, rates of overweight and obesity are higher for African-American and Hispanic women than Caucasian women, higher for Hispanic men than Caucasian and African-American men, higher in the South and Midwest, and tend to increase with age; research also shows that the heaviest Americans have become even heavier the past decade (Food Research and Action Center, 2012). Since marketing commonly displays unrealistic images of health and food, it is commonly suspected as a component that fuels the trend.
It can be argued that adults should have the ability to exercise their freedom of choice in the selection of their diet and exercise habits, but children are a special case. Children, especially young children, have not adequately developed the cognitive mechanisms that make the filtering of marketing messages possible. When children see popular television figures like Ronald McDonald for example, they can be easily swayed by the message such a character promotes. Many people have compared this to other historical advertising campaigns with other dangerous products such as Joe the Camel who used to promote smoking of a certain brand of cigarettes.
One study examined the use and...
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