{"id":3992,"date":"1976-05-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"1976-05-01T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-57-no-5-may-1976-everyone-is-a-consumer\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:19:30","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:19:30","slug":"vol-57-no-5-may-1976-everyone-is-a-consumer","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-57-no-5-may-1976-everyone-is-a-consumer\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 57, No. 5 &#8211; May 1976 &#8211; Everyone is a Consumer"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Whatever sort of salesmanship is                     used, the market demand is set by the consumers, and everyone                     is a consumer. All must have the necessaries of life; some                     of us are purchasers of machinery and the other tools of production;                     and everyone is in the market for the &#8220;little bit extra&#8221; which                     we believe will make us happy.<\/p>\n<p> If history repeats itself, people of thousands of years                     hence will be judging us, as we do our ancestors, by our middens                     and our monuments &#8211; by the things we discarded and by the                     things we revered as the most choice symbols of our civilization                     and culture.<\/p>\n<p>Practically speaking, some people get a sort of built-in                     bonus with every pay envelope, while others lose part of their                     salaries every month. It is not only in the choice of things                     on which to spend earnings, but in the actual spending, that                     the bonus is won or the loss incurred.<\/p>\n<p>Here is one area where the slogan &#8220;what you don&#8217;t know won&#8217;t                     hurt you&#8221; is stupid and harmful. Economic ignorance interferes                     with our happiness in a thousand ways every day. It makes                     us wasteful, it robs us of satisfactions we should have, it                     leads us to buy the wrong things, and it causes us to blame                     our political leaders and our economists for troubles which                     rise straight from our own mistakes and misjudgments.<\/p>\n<p>Good living is not all dependent upon extensive buying.                     One&#8217;s intelligence and one&#8217;s good taste rank equal with money                     in making possible a satisfying life.<\/p>\n<p>Much depends upon choice. In our country we have freedom                     to choose. We can look around at leisure to see what the stores                     have to offer, and at what price. We may save on this to spend                     on that. Some will want recreation; others will satisfy themselves                     with palate-pampering food. Some will put up a big front with                     plush cars and all that goes with them; others will not care                     what their neighbours think of their status, and will spend                     their income on beautiful music, on books, on ballet, or a                     host of other cultural contributions to life. No one can say                     who is right and who is wrong in these choices.<\/p>\n<p>This, though, is certain: our income costs too much in work,                     which represents the time of our life, to be thrown around                     thoughtlessly. Those who plan the use of their time and money                     to get what is for them individually the very best can change                     the whole level of their living.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone knows with what feeling of sympathetic tolerance                     we watch the perplexed little child who stands, clutching                     a dime, before a counter displaying a bewildering choice of                     candy. But how different are we grown-ups? There are 350,000                     possible choices in a big department store; there are 250                     kinds of tooth brushes, more than a hundred makes of washing                     machines, fifty kinds of motor oil; and has anyone counted                     all the sorts of fountain pens?<\/p>\n<p>We can trust no longer the old ways of judging worth. The                     thumb-and-finger test of fabrics and flour no longer serves.                     It was easier to decide between two brooms than between two                     vacuum cleaners, and between two wash-boards than between                     two washing machines. How utterly lost are the old techniques                     when it comes to judging new gadgets!<\/p>\n<p>Most of our purchases are compromises. We may take shoes                     in a style we do not particularly like so that we may have                     the size we need for comfort; we may take a newspaper with                     whose editorial policy we are in violent disagreement if it                     is the best paper for reporting news. It is not often, indeed,                     that all the utilities we desire in an article are wrapped                     up in the parcel we buy without including some features we                     do not like.<\/p>\n<p>The wise buyer is the person who sees to it that muddy thinking                     is not allowed to interfere with planning for the greatest                     bundle of utilities that can be purchased with the money available.<\/p>\n<p>To know precisely what you want is the best possible approach                     to obtaining value. When the shopper &#8211; whether for hosiery                     or for machinery &#8211; has a mental check-list of qualities to                     look for, he is qualified in three important ways: to get                     value for his money, to choose the thing that will best accomplish                     his purpose and to know on what points he may compromise.<\/p>\n<p>The ideal is to put our finger on the few characteristics                     which count most in our minds. This is knowledge that comes                     only after comparison and analysis. Window shopping is not                     all lost time, because in a stroll down Main Street we soak                     up impressions about what is on the market. By adding a dash                     of creative imagination, geared to our idea of what will make                     us happy, we can mature our ideas into plans that will lead                     us toward wise purchases.<\/p>\n<h3>Planning expenditure<\/h3>\n<p>Another way to add to the satisfaction obtained from purchases                     is by planning spending programmes and allotting certain specified                     sums to definite areas of expenditure. Those who live a well-rounded                     life are those most likely to be living a happy life. They                     decide upon the things worth doing and worth having, and then                     they apply the principles of good buymanship.<\/p>\n<p>Some authorities say that we can increase the purchasing                     power of our incomes by 25 per cent if only we develop our                     buying methods to the efficiency an executive applies in producing                     the goods we buy.<\/p>\n<p>The consumer&#8217;s problem is largely one of choosing. Our desires                     and wants are inexhaustible, but we must decide which ones                     to gratify. The purpose of careful shopping is to get the                     most of what we most want. What we choose to want is our own                     business, but an honest analysis will lead to clear-headed                     shopping.<\/p>\n<p>Spending for present satisfactions should be weighed against                     future needs and wants. When we exchange our money for goods,                     we are converting our past life (or the life of someone else)                     into present or future satisfaction. We must get as good a                     return as possible.<\/p>\n<p>Planning expenditures will enable us to build toward something.                     It may take five years or more to furnish a kitchen or a living-room                     in the desired way, but unless we know in what direction we                     are heading we may end up with a kitchen full of gadgets and                     an inefficient stove, or a living-room full of knick-knacks                     that collect dust while the chairs still need re-upholstering.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone knows the truth of these principles, but when all                     has been said the impulsive &#8220;I want&#8221; is likely to triumph                     over &#8220;It is good.&#8221; Emotional buying is the greatest wrecker                     of budgets, and it is of many kinds: the emotional thrill                     of a fast automobile, of an evening of opera, or of a beautiful                     dress. How do we bring these emotional impulses within the                     bounds of a plan looking toward lasting happiness?<\/p>\n<p>The simplest way is to consider what we must <em>go without                     <\/em>in case we make the particular expenditure under consideration.                     No one can say that ours are the wrong wants or that we are                     taking the wrong way of satisfying our wants. All that can                     be said is that we must weigh carefully and intelligently,                     and plan purposefully.<\/p>\n<p>Wasteful spending is represented by that part of our dollar                     bill which does not return us full value, present or future,                     according to our considered judgment of what is the best contribution                     to happiness. It would be far better in the long run if we                     were to save that doubtful part of the dollar bill toward                     some purchase which would yield undoubted satisfaction. That                     is why banks have savings departments. They provide a depository                     for funds where the money is safe from loss and theft and                     also safe from hasty and thoughtless spending.<\/p>\n<p>Thought is needed when it comes to buying on credit. Good                     credit is a valuable asset. In private life, it may be a life-saver                     economically, and in business circles your credit rating is                     like the rating of you as a person. The way to build credit                     worthiness is to keep commitments well within your ability                     to meet them, and then to honour them scrupulously and promptly.<\/p>\n<h3>Utility<\/h3>\n<p>To most people the word &#8220;utility&#8221; means something like electricity                     or water. An economist, asked to explain it, would ask: What                     is the value of this thing in use? Utility is the aim of economic                     effort, of invention and of production.<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that everything should be mechanical                     or &#8220;practical&#8221;. A rose has value in use, while a metal-turning                     lathe, useful in its place, would be a nuisance in a living-room.<\/p>\n<p>The life of a utility varies according to the nature of                     its work. The rose will fade in several days, but a typewriter                     is expected to last for several years. This is an important                     consideration to the shopper, because it involves price.<\/p>\n<p>Price is the amount of money for which a commodity exchanges                     in the market, but it involves far more than that. It takes                     into consideration how long the article will last; the amount                     of labour it will save, the degree of satisfaction it will                     give, the added work it will accomplish &#8211; in short, &#8220;price&#8221;                     includes the true value of the article to the buyer.<\/p>\n<p>Smart consumers are highly price-and-value conscious. Not                     only price-conscious, because they know that sometimes better                     value means higher price, but they consider also whether the                     return promised by the article is worth the time and effort                     they or their breadwinners have spent in exchange for it.<\/p>\n<h3>Quality<\/h3>\n<p>Quality means good material, good design and good workmanship.                     When it is a factor, quality will give a maximum of service                     per dollar spent.<\/p>\n<p>Whether or not to buy high quality goods depends upon first                     considering what advantages quality gives, and then deciding                     whether these advantages are important to you. It is not sensible                     to pay for a quality you will not utilize. Is the article                     to last a lifetime, or only for a summer?<\/p>\n<p>This involves, too, the problem of value per dollar of expenditure.                     If a tailor listed all the good features that could be incorporated                     in a suit, and asked us to &#8220;tick&#8221; all that we should like,                     we should probably mark them all. However, when he came to                     tell the cost we should likely say: But I have other things                     to buy, and I can&#8217;t spare all that money for a suit; I&#8217;ll                     have to make a choice among all these features. Then we should                     pick and choose the utilities in the suit that would do us                     the most good, and let the others go.<\/p>\n<p>It is not possible for a consumer to be sufficiently expert                     to judge all commodities wisely. He must rely upon the reputation                     of the manufacturer to make a good product and upon the vendor                     to represent it properly. The reliable retail merchant investigates                     the quality of the things he sells, is willing to give dependable                     assurance as to that quality, and will stand behind his judgment.<\/p>\n<p>In one thing the consumer must be specific. Instead of saying                     he wants a &#8220;good&#8221; article, let him tell particularly what                     he expects the article to do. Very few things have just one                     general quality; we need to choose the special advantages                     we desire, and tell the merchant clearly what we want.<\/p>\n<p>In buying food, of course, general quality grading is very                     useful. Many Canadian foods carry a distinctive grade marking,                     either on the container or on the product itself. The standards                     are established and enforced by the Department of Agriculture,                     Ottawa.<\/p>\n<p>Another useful guide to shoppers is the brand system. Instead                     of buying utterly unknown sorts of goods from bulk stock (which                     may be done safely by people who are excellent judges of value)                     the ordinary consumer will find it more satisfactory to purchase                     goods to which the maker has signed his name.<\/p>\n<p>Besides making shopping easier, this makes it safer, because                     the brand name carries with it the idea of a constant level                     of quality. The owner of the brand name has invested largely                     in his factory and in advertising, and if he allows his quality                     to fall off his brand may become a warning rather than an                     invitation. He must live up to his standards.<\/p>\n<h3>Standard of living<\/h3>\n<p>The standard of living of any person or family is the choice                     pattern decided upon. It includes the necessaries of life                     (according to the individual selection of what is necessary);                     education, amusement, security, maintenance of health, and                     almost anything that anyone wishes to bring under the rubric                     &#8220;standard of living&#8221;. An increase of the number of luxuries                     or of the quality of goods which members of a family or of                     a society choose as being necessary to their enjoyment of                     living indicates a rise in their standard of living.<\/p>\n<p>Those who overshoot the mark in defining their standard                     of living will be made unhappy by their inability to achieve                     all they hope for. Extravagant spending on a few of the items                     entering into living will produce intense unhappiness.<\/p>\n<p>There are no substitutes for happiness. It is something                     that has to be striven for. There was an ancient Greek jest:                     A man who was invited to attend a show where there was an                     actor who could exactly counterfeit the nightingale said:                     &#8220;Son, I have heard the nightingale itself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The wise consumer knows that nothing can take the place                     of a reality which is available to him. He may indulge in                     a fleeting pleasure once in a while, but he knows that in                     all probability that indulgence means he will have to forego                     the satisfaction of wants which may be more important.<\/p>\n<p>Food, clothing and shelter cover the primary wants, things                     which are essential to living. To increase their pleasures,                     people have added delicacies in food, ornateness in dress,                     and sumptuousness in housing. To the extent that they have                     done so, and in keeping with their social environment, men                     and women have burdened themselves with the need to keep up                     a show in a thousand and one ways which they consider &#8220;necessary&#8221;                     to their happiness.<\/p>\n<p>Sometimes things are bought because they are considered                     necessary to maintain social position. Even two generations                     ago, the provision of physical comfort was the ideal. Today,                     every group has its own ideas of what is the best way to be                     happy &#8211; and, to their sorrow, many groups think the best way                     is to spend more money on things that make a show. Keeping                     up with the Jones&#8217;s explains much wasteful consumption, and                     many heartaches.<\/p>\n<h3>Helps to wise buying<\/h3>\n<p>When it comes to choosing between goods of a similar character,                     what guarantees have we as to quality and quantity and their                     relation to price? What information is available to the customer,                     how reliable is it, and how should we take advantage of it?<\/p>\n<p>Our natural questions are: How much are we getting, how                     safe is it, what is its size and fit, what does its name mean,                     what is its worth relative to other similar things?<\/p>\n<p>Not all of these questions can be answered specifically                     in the case of every article. We cannot tell by looking at                     a vitamin capsule what vitamins it contains, or how many.                     We cannot tell by examining an electric motor how it will                     stand up under the service to which we propose to subject                     it. No mere looking at a television receiving set will tell                     us what broadcasts it will bring in efficiently. We cannot                     be specialists in all the great variety of things we must                     buy; we must depend upon what we can learn from the salesman                     or from the label.<\/p>\n<p>There is no substitute for informative labelling. It is                     all very well to have a company or an organization mark a                     commodity &#8220;tested and approved&#8221;, but that is not enough. The                     customer should be enabled to judge for himself on the basis                     of clearly presented facts. &#8220;Blurbs&#8221; on style and colour are                     beside the point in most cases where quality is a factor:                     the consumer requires assurance about durability under the                     conditions to which he will subject the product. Then, within                     the price range his planning has dictated, he can choose the                     style and colour and other subsidiary features he desires.<\/p>\n<p>Labels are the most convenient, most explicit, most accurate,                     and most reliable source of information to which a consumer                     can turn. Confidence is built in the consumer by informative                     labels, because here is no high-pressure salesmanship, no                     advertising persuasion, but just a plain statement of qualities                     and values.<\/p>\n<p>The label is precise as a guide to choices between similar                     goods, but because it says so much in so few words the consumer                     needs to pay attention to it. He should ask himself: Exactly                     what does this label say? What does it claim for the goods?                     What does it not say? What authority stands behind it? When                     a label makes specific, plainly factual statements, the manufacturer                     or merchant is trying to do a reliable job.<\/p>\n<h3>Consumer education<\/h3>\n<p>The new wealth of goods and services from which we can choose                     gives consumers the finest chance in all history to live well,                     if they can learn to use the opportunity fully.<\/p>\n<p>The first lesson is that no true values are impaired by                     learning the truth. When the old thumb-and-finger method of                     appraising goods is not sufficient to establish their worthiness                     we need to go further afield. We need to call upon sources                     outside ourselves: magazine articles, newspaper surveys, advertisements,                     booklets, and all other sorts of guides. What we seek is to                     get what we want, that will give us the greatest satisfaction,                     at a reasonable price.<\/p>\n<p>There is no substitute for keeping our eyes and our ears                     open and our senses on the alert, but we should also use all                     the aids provided by producers to give us a basis for judgment.                     Whether a given purchase is simple or complex, the principle                     of good shopping is always the same. It lies in getting information                     about many comparable offerings, with emphasis upon the features                     that are important to us, so as to have points upon which                     to base a decision.<\/p>\n<p>Experience may be a useful teacher, but when it comes to                     buying goods and services experience may be expensive. Anyone                     who will make the effort to find out exactly what to look                     for and how to identify it can save most of the tuition fee.                     There is a great difference between the amount of satisfaction                     we get out of purchases per dollar when we are alert and intelligent                     about what we buy, and what we get if we are slipshod and                     ignorant.<\/p>\n<h3>Sources of information<\/h3>\n<p>The first lessons about buying are undoubtedly learned in                     the home and in the school. Children will, in the natural                     course of events, become purchasers and users. What they observe                     at home makes a lasting impression upon their judgment.<\/p>\n<p>A young person who cannot select tooth-paste or powder intelligently,                     or even know whether it serves any useful function, is certainly                     not qualified to judge the paces of an automobile or the durability                     of a piece of production machinery.<\/p>\n<p>It is suggested in the <em>Annals <\/em>of the American Association                     of Political and Social Science that courses in biology, chemistry,                     physics, engineering and economics might be more closely integrated                     with life. Science classes might test electric toasters, can-openers,                     and household rubber, leather and paper; they might analyse                     soap, cosmetics, shoe pastes and prepared flours. Small work                     benches might take the place of stamp collections. We might                     get away from utter dependence upon what we hear and read.<\/p>\n<p>Advertising will help the person who is in earnest about                     shopping efficiently. Awareness of goods and services that                     are available is an important part of the shopper&#8217;s knowledge,                     and the wise shopper uses advertisements to his advantage.                     Much advertising is of educational value.<\/p>\n<p>Consumers&#8217; organizations help, too. So long as they give                     impartial judgments about goods they have tested efficiently,                     they contribute to knowledge. The Better Business Bureau,                     for example, established in 1911, exists to protect people                     from what is unfair or misleading, and to increase public                     confidence in business by striving for better consumer satisfaction                     through accurate representation of products and services.<\/p>\n<p>There are many laws for the protection of buyers. They tend                     to make the market safe for the consumer, safe against fraud,                     misrepresentation, irresponsibility, exorbitant prices, restraints                     on trade, and deleterious commodities.<\/p>\n<p>Waste in consumption is enormous. To refrain from buying                     needlessly, to conserve what one has, to avoid unnecessary                     returns, to think before buying so as to get precisely what                     is needed: these precautions by buyers will result in a better                     market at lower prices.<\/p>\n<p>Intelligent consumers can help to make distribution cheaper,                     and it is in their interest to do so. It will save time and                     it will cut down the cost of serving them if consumers know                     in advance what they want. Ruth Barry complains in her book                     <em>The Wise Consumer <\/em>about the buyer &#8220;spending fifteen                     minutes deciding between two shades of blue and then finally                     buying pink.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A decent customer wishes to deal openly and honourably with                     those who serve him. He realizes that he needs to use the                     credit and return privileges of the store with care. Both                     of these add to the cost of operating the store, and that                     cost is somewhere included in the cost of goods.<\/p>\n<p>Indiscriminate returning of goods, depreciated perhaps by                     careless handling and packing, snowballs into a big red-figure                     item on the store&#8217;s books.<\/p>\n<p>The merchants themselves can help by making their advertising                     fully informative, providing labels that tell the necessary                     facts, and training salespeople to be sincere assistants to                     the customers.<\/p>\n<p>There is no substitute for honesty and fair business ethics                     on either side of the counter. The customer who has trained                     himself to recognize quality and to make judgments will find                     that, in the occasional case wherein goods fail to live up                     to what was reasonably expected of them, he has plenty of                     means to protect himself.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[56],"class_list":["post-3992","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-56"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 57, No. 5 - May 1976 - Everyone is a Consumer - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-57-no-5-may-1976-everyone-is-a-consumer\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 57, No. 5 - May 1976 - Everyone is a Consumer - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Whatever sort of salesmanship is used, the market demand is set by the consumers, and everyone is a consumer. 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