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Consumer organization

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Consumer organizations areadvocacy groups that seek to protect people fromcorporate abuse like unsafe products,predatory lending,false advertising,astroturfing andpollution.

Consumer Organizations may operate viaprotests,litigation,campaigning, orlobbying. They may engage insingle-issue advocacy (e.g., theBritishCampaign for Real Ale (CAMRA), which campaigned againstkeg beer and forcask ale)[1] or they may set themselves up as more general consumerwatchdogs, such as theConsumers' Association in the UK.

One common means of providing consumers useful information is the independent comparative survey or test of products or services, involving different manufacturers or companies (e.g.,Which?,Consumer Reports, etc.).

Another arena where consumer organizations have operated isfood safety. The needs for campaigning in this area are less easy to reconcile with their traditional methods, since the scientific, dietary or medical evidence is normally more complex than in other arenas, such as the electric safety ofwhite goods. The current standards onmandatory labelling, in developed countries, have in part been shaped by past lobbying by consumer groups.

The aim of consumer organizations may be to establish and to attempt to enforceconsumer rights. Effective work has also been done, however, simply by using the threat of bad publicity to keep companies' focus on the consumers' point of view.[2]

Consumer organizations may attempt to serve consumer interests by relatively direct actions such as creating and/or disseminating market information, and prohibiting specific acts or practices, or by promoting competitive forces in the markets which directly or indirectly affect consumers (such as transport, electricity, communications, etc.).[2]

History

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Two precursor organizations to the modern consumer organization arestandards organizations and consumers leagues.[3] Both of these appeared in the United States around 1900.[3]

Trade associations andprofessional societies began to establish standards organizations to reduce industry waste and increase productivity.[3] Consumer leagues modeled themselves aftertrade unions in their attempts to improve the market withboycotts in the same way that trade unions sought to improve working conditions withstrike action.[3]

Consumer organizations by country

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International consumer organizations

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  • Consumers International - International NGO
  • ANEC (Europe; focus on standardization)
  • BEUC (Europe;French:Bureau Européen des Unions de Consommateurs)
  • ICRT The only independent international organization for consumer research and testing

National organizations

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Australia

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Botswana

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Canada

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Fiji

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France

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  • Association de défense d'éducation et d'information du consommateur (ADEIC)
  • Association Contre les Abus des Banques Européennes (ACABE)
  • Association Force ouvrière des consommateurs (AFOC)
  • Association Léo-Lagrange de défense du consommateur (ALLDC)
  • Confédération générale du logement (CGL)
  • Confédération nationale du logement (CNL)
  • Association pour l'information et la défense des consommateurs salariés (Indecosa-CGT)
  • Confédération nationale des associations familiales catholiques (CNAFC)
  • Conseil national des associations familiales laïques (CNAFAL)
  • Confédération syndicale des familles (CSF)
  • Consommation Logement Cadre de vie (CLCV)
  • Familles de France (FF)
  • Familles rurales (FR)
  • Fédération nationale des associations d'usagers des transports (FNAUT)
  • Union fédérale des consommateurs - Que choisir (UFC-Que Choisir)
  • Union nationale des associations familiales (UNAF)

Germany

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Hong Kong

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India

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Ireland

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Israel

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Japan

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Netherlands

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Logo of theConsumentenbond

Aside from this general consumer organisation, the Netherlands is home to many categorical consumer organisations whose working terrain is limited to a certain part of the markets. Examples of categorical organisations include:

  • The Vereniging Eigen Huis ("Own House Association", for house owners; over 650,000 members)
  • The Vereniging Consument & Geldzaken ("Consumer & Monetary Affairs Association", for financial consumers, of banking and insurance products; 32,000 members)
  • The Woonbond ("League for Living", for renters)

Finally, there is a business regulation agency, charged with competition oversight, sector-specific regulation of several sectors, and enforcement of consumer protection laws:

Singapore

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  • Competition and Consumer Commission of Singapore (CCCS) is a statutory board to oversight consumer protection and anti-competition malpractices (e.g.price fixing,bid rigging, market sharing and production control) in markets.[4]
  • Consumer Association of Singapore (CASE) is aNGO that promotes consumer interests and fair trading.[5]

Switzerland

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Main article:Swiss Alliance of Consumer Organisations
The Swiss Alliance of Consumer Organisations

The Swiss Alliance of Consumer Organisations is theumbrella organisation of the threeSwiss consumer organisations (the Stiftung für Konsumentenschutz (SKS) of German-speaking Switzerland, the Fédération romande des consommateurs (FRC) of French-speaking Switzerland and the Associazione consumatrici e consumatori della Svizzera italiana (ACSI) of Italian-speaking Switzerland).[6]

United Kingdom

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Main article:Consumer protection in the United Kingdom
Which? is the most influential UK consumers association.

In the United Kingdom, theEnterprise Act 2002 allows consumer bodies that have been approved by theSecretary of State for Trade and Industry to be designated as "super-complainants" to theCompetition and Markets Authority. Thesesuper-complainants are intended to, "strengthen the voice of consumers," who are "unlikely to have access individually to the kind of information necessary to judge whether markets are failing for them." Eight have been designated as of 2007[update]:[7]

United States

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TheConsumers Union was founded in 1936.

Consumer magazines

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By 1969 most capitalist countries with developed marketplaces hosted consumer organizations that published consumer magazines which reported the results ofproduct testing.[8] Internationally, the idea of consumer organizations spread from Consumers Union in the United States starting in 1956.[8] The growth of interest in product testing journalism might be explained by increased consumption of mass-marketed products in and before that period.[8] That increased international consumption itself was an effect of theaftermath of World War II.[8]

Consumer magazine circulation[9][10]
Year magazine startedMagazineCountryPublisherYear publisher founded1969 sales1975 sales
1936Consumer ReportsUSAConsumers Union19361,800,0002,300,000
1953ConsumentengidsNetherlandsConsumentenbond1953256,000470,000
1953Forbruker RapportenNorwayForbrukerradet (Consumers Council)1953169,000235,000
1957Which?UKConsumers Association1956600,000700,000
1957Rad och RonSwedenStatens Institut for Konsumenfragor (Institute for Consumer Information)1957104,718n.a.
1959Test-AchatsBelgiumAssociation des Consommateurs / Verbruikersunie (AC/V)1957102,235240,000
1959ChoiceAustraliaAustralian Consumers' Association195967,204120,000
1961Rad og ResultaterDenmarkStatens Husholdningsrad (Home Economics Council)193528,100n.a.
1961Que ChoisirFranceUnion Federale des Consommateurs (UFC)195115,00030,000
1961KonsumentAustriaVerein fur Konsumenteninformation (VKI)196025,000n.a.
1963Canadian ConsumerCanadaConsumers' Association of Canada194743,000n.a.
1964TaenkDenmarkDanske Husmodres Forbrugerrad (Danish Housewives Council)194748,000n.a.
1965Il ConsumatoreItalyUnione Nazionale Consumatori1965100,000n.a.
1966TestGermanyStiftung Warentest196468,000250,000
197050 Millions de ConsummateursFranceInstitut National de la Consommation19670300,000
2012Consumer VoicePakistanConsumer Voice Pakistan20120n.a

In the 25 years after World War II, there was a correlation between the number of people in a country who were purchasing cars and the popularity of consumer magazines.[11] In some cases, an increase in other consumer purchases seemed to drive popularity of consumer magazines, but the correlation was closest for populations who made decisions about buying cars.[11] The availability of consumer magazines comforted consumers when individuals in society suddenly became overwhelmed with marketplace decisions, and the popularity of magazines seemed to grow as more marketplace decisions became available.[12]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Cromarty, CAMRA and crazy cask cancellation".
  2. ^ab"Consumer Protection | Laws | fraud | government regulation | consumer rights".www.premiercallcentre.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2016-04-19. Retrieved2016-04-06.
  3. ^abcdRao, Hayagreeva (1998)."Caveat emptor: The construction of nonprofit consumer watchdog organizations"(PDF).The American Journal of Sociology.103 (4):912–961.doi:10.1086/231293.S2CID 143250168. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 31 January 2012. Retrieved12 December 2012.
  4. ^"Who We Are".Competition and Consumer Commission Association of Singapore. 26 April 2023. Retrieved2024-01-04.
  5. ^"Home".Consumer Association of Singapore. Retrieved2024-01-04.
  6. ^"Alliance of Consumer Organisations: United Together for the Consumers"Archived 2016-11-14 at theWayback Machine,Federal Office of Public Health (page visited on 13 November 2016).
  7. ^Super-Complaints - BERRArchived 2007-02-05 at theWayback Machine
  8. ^abcdHilton 2009, p. 25.
  9. ^Hilton 2009, p. 26.
  10. ^Thorelli, Hans B.; Thorelli, Sarah V. (1977).Consumer information systems and consumer policy. Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger Pub. Co. pp. 327–60.ISBN 978-0884102717.
  11. ^abHilton 2009, p. 28.
  12. ^Hilton 2009, p. 29.

Sources

[edit]
the philosophy of and activism forconsumer protection
Concepts
Activism
Fields of study
Key players
Testing organizations
Methodologies
Product fields
Scales
Types
Corporate groups
Business network
Oppositional groups
See also
International
National
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