
'Tis the Season of Receiving
Materialistic parents breed materialistic children, study suggests
By Jennifer Thomas
HealthScoutNews Reporter
SUNDAY, Dec. 16 (HealthScoutNews) -- Your son
starts his Christmas list in July. You dread taking your daughter to the mall
because of the non-stop nagging for gifts. And products sold on infomercials
keep arriving on your doorstep.
You may have materialistic children.
New research has found such children expect more presents from their parents
at Christmas, exert more influence on what their parents buy, are more likely to
buy something they saw on TV, and are less likely to have a savings account.
And parents who scored the highest on the materialism scale had the most
materialistic children.
"The bottom line is when the parent looks at the child, the parent has
to look in the mirror," says Marvin Goldberg, lead author of the study and
a professor of marketing at Penn State University. "You shape their values
more than anyone."
Goldberg and his colleagues developed a test called the Youth Materialism
Scale to determine children's materialism relative to their peers. The
questionnaire was given to 540 parents and 996 children between the ages of 9
and 14.
The researchers focused on children in this age group, called tweens, because
they are increasingly being targeted by advertisers. The 27 million tweens in
the United States directly or indirectly influence $170 billion in sales,
according to the study.
"Marketers have reached down to a still younger age and are now
marketing products to tweens that were previously limited to teen-agers,"
Goldberg says. "Why is this so significant? One way or another, it serves
to rob children of their childhood."
The children in the study were asked whether they "disagree a lot,"
"disagree a little," "agree a little" or "agree a
lot" with a series of statements.
The statements included: "I have fun just thinking of all the things I
own." "I'd rather spend time buying things than doing almost anything
else." "The only kind of job I want when I grow up is one that gets me
a lot of money."
The study found that the most materialistic kids -- those whose scored in the
upper quartile -- were more interested in TV commercials than the least
materialistic children, those in the lowest quartile. About 68 percent of tweens
in the upper quartile said they watched commercials most of the time, compared
to 54 percent of those in the lowest quartile.
About 77 percent of the children who scored the highest on the materialism
scale said they expected their parents to buy a product because they saw it on
TV, compared to 50 percent of the least materialistic children.
About 22 percent of the most materialistic children said they had called a
phone number shown on TV to buy a product, compared to 14 percent of the least
materialistic kids.
And although only 45 percent of the most materialistic kids had a savings
account, 59 percent of the least materialistic did.
Youths who scored high on the materialism scale also expected their parents
to spend more on birthday and Christmas presents -- $182.01, compared to $115.61
for less materialistic children.
"I'm a professor from a business school; I start from the premise that
advertising is a major function without which our standard of living could not
be achieved," Goldberg says. "There are lots of products out there
that make our lives simpler, easier, better and safer. But I've become quite
concerned when this function runs away with itself and we don't do enough to
protect children."
Goldberg says his study, which is to appear in an upcoming issue of the Journal
of Consumer Psychology, was criticized at first for lumping pre-pubescent
9-year-olds with 14-year-olds. But the marketing of products tied to pop music
sensations like Britney Spears and 'N Sync is as much directed at the younger
kids as the older ones, he says.
Stanley Goldstein, a child clinical psychologist in private practice in
Middletown, N.Y., says the word "materialistic" is pejorative, and he
has some doubts about Goldberg's conclusions.
In and of itself, there's nothing wrong with the desire to shop and acquire
new goods, Goldstein says.
Children use products, like clothing, skateboards or music, to differentiate
themselves from grown-ups; it's a normal part of growing up, he says.
But, he adds, "contrary to people's beliefs, kids are not easy to market
to or to manipulate."
Problems occur when parents use gifts and other material goods as a
substitute for love and attention, he says.
"You do not spoil a child by giving them everything they want,"
Goldstein says. "You can only spoil a child by giving them things in place
of emotional support and attention. Then you harm them."
What To Do
If you've decided to change your materialistic ways, you might consider
giving an "alternative" gift this holiday season.
Alternatives for Simple Living was
started in 1973 as a protest against the commercialism of Christmas.
Alternative Gifts International is a
organization that lets you give a gift, in the name of a friend or family
member, to a charity or relief organization. The group puts out a catalog each
year of approximately 30 relief agencies around the world that it has
researched. This year's suggested gifts include $24 to feed an orphan in Romania
or $30 to support a child with HIV in Romania.
SOURCES: Interviews with Marvin Goldberg, Ph.D, professor of marketing, Smeal College of Business, Penn State University, University Park, Pa.; Stanley Goldstein, Ph.D, child clinical psychologist, Middletown, N.Y.
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