Business Ethics
PHL/323 Ethics Management Current Ethical Issue Business Paper (select a recent article -- back 1 year) • Research information issue deals business ethics a newspaper, magazine, journal, TV, Internet.
Current ethical issue in business: Ethics of marketing junk food
There are many products which are marketed to the American public which are not 'healthy' such as cigarettes and spirits. However, the issue of food marketing is a more nebulous one, ethically speaking. Unlike nicotine and alcohol, human beings need food to survive. But certain types of food have been identified by many nutritionists as being uniquely deleterious to human health, aka 'junk food.' McDonald's has drawn particular ire, in part because of its marketing to children, according to the article "Marketing to children: Accepting responsibility," recently published in Business Ethics. McDonald's is an American icon, yet it also sells some of the unhealthiest food in the country. McDonald's has had to navigate the treacherous waters of promoting its core products and responding to consumer's and legislator's concerns about the degree to which it is contributing to the obesity epidemic in America.
The Happy Meal, McDonald's meal that is specifically designed to attract children, exemplifies this conflict. Children often drive much of the real foot traffic into fast food restaurants, as they 'nag' parents about wanting to eat in a place advertised by their favorite characters with toys and kid-friendly food. But much of the food in a Happy Meal is extremely unhealthy. "San Francisco is one of the cities that have voted to ban selling toys with fast food for children that exceed certain levels of salt, fat, calories and sugar. McDonald's was accused of deceptive marketing practices to children over the lure of toys as an inducement to buy Happy Meals" (O'Brien 2011).
On one hand, McDonald's has a legal right to market its product. And, despite all of the nutritional wisdom which advises them to the contrary, people still want to eat fast food, and usually when they enter a McDonald's they want a burger, not a salad. McDonald's has tried to answer such claims by offering more healthy meal alternatives to consumers, but it has still been subject to intense ethical criticism because of the health implications of eating the foods that are the primary drivers of its profits. Furthermore, there are contentions that children do not have the cognitive resources at a young age to distinguish between information and advertising, making them particularly vulnerable to an assault from McDonald's advertising. "In February 2011, in anticipation of McDonald's shareholder meeting, Corporate Accountability International launched a campaign to fire Ronald McDonald, the clown mascot for the last nearly 50 years, and encourage headquarters to stop marketing to children by delivering petitions to individual restaurants. They also asked the chain to address directly the relationship of fast food to obesity" (O'Brien 2011).
Including apple slices in its Happy Meals will not silence critics. But nor will a fundamental shift in its product line satisfy all of the firm's obligations. According to classical conceptions of business ethics, a business' sole responsibility is to make a profit for its shareholders. McDonald's has found that marketing to children is an extremely effective way to generate revenue, despite consumers' worries about their waistlines and their children's diets. However, other conceptions of firm ethics stress that stakeholders are not limited to shareholders, and the firm has a responsibility to the community, including consumers and the public at large.
The advantage of soliciting young consumers, besides parents' desperation to please their children, is that they will be 'patrons for life,' provided they establish their eating habits and preference for McDonald's early on. Fast food has been reputed to have an addictive quality, although this claim has not yet been proven. "Obesity is characterized by resistance to insulin, leptin and other hormonal signals that would normally control appetite and limit reward. Neuroimaging studies in obese...
Johnson and Johnson issued a public relations response immediately naming their number one priority: to aggressively protect any consumer from the potential hazards that may be present in any of their family of products. Symptoms of the Problem -- Quickly, the crisis reached epic nationwide coverage. The panic that ensued, somewhat as the result of the twenty-four hour media coverage, fueled this panic into a frenzy. One hospital in Chicago,
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