1. World problems
  2. Proliferation of consumer products

Proliferation of consumer products

  • Excessive consumer choice
  • Consumer over-choice
  • Consumer apathy

Nature

Consumers are increasingly overwhelmed by the range of choices, especially in industrialized countries. Increasingly people are reaching a point of over-choice, namely the point at which the advantage of diversity and individualization are cancelled by the complexity of the consumer's decision-making process. Individuals can then become paralyzed by the choices, leading to a form of apathy which spills over into other areas of life.

Incidence

In the USA in 1990 consumers can select from among 25,000 items on supermarket shelves (including 200 kinds of cereal and 11,092 magazines), access 53 television channels, subscribe to 11,092 periodicals, and be solicited by many thousands of pubic and special interest groups.

Claim

Marketing has cultivated a misunderstanding about the nature of freedom of choice. This is not equivalent to multiplying the opportunities for choice. Infinite choice reduces people to passivity.

Broader

Consumerism
Presentable

Narrower

Polypharmacy
Presentable

Aggravates

Fast fashion
Excellent

Aggravated by

Reduces

Related

Strategy

Being apathetic
Yet to rate

Value

Apathy
Yet to rate
Proliferation
Yet to rate
Excess
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #12: Responsible Consumption and Production

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(F) Fuzzy exceptional problems
Subject
  • Amenities » Consumers
  • Industry » Products
  • Policy-making » Policy
  • Societal problems » Proliferation
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    May 20, 2022