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Jeans made by kids? People "forget" facts when buying unethical products

by Varsha Saraogi | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 10 January 2018 18:31 GMT

ARCHIVE PHOTO: A price tag is seen on a pair of jeans as a salesman climbs to take out a shirt for a customer inside a shop in Mumbai August 21, 2013. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui

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"It is a learned coping mechanism"

By Varsha Saraogi

LONDON, Jan 10 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Consumers who knowingly buy products that have been made unethically - using child labour or endangered trees - may cope by forgetting the truth about their origins, researchers said.

In an online study by Ohio State University (OSU) in the United States, people who were asked to put together an outfit with jeans made by children were much less likely to remember their origin than those who saw ethically sourced jeans.

"It's not necessarily a conscious decision by consumers to forget what they don't want to know," said Rebecca Reczek, the study's co-author and associate professor of marketing at OSU.

"It is a learned coping mechanism to tune out uncomfortable information because it makes their lives easier."

With modern slavery in the global spotlight, retailers are coming under increasing regulatory and consumer pressure to ensure that products ranging from smartphones to cosmetics are free from exploitation.

In another study, OSU asked about 240 students to memorise the quality, price and source of six desks. They quickly forgot the origin of desks made from endangered rainforests, but not that of those produced from sustainable tree farms, it found.

"You need to realise that this memory bias exists," study co-author Daniel Zane said in a statement.

"Don't put something in your online shopping cart that you know was made unethically and say you'll think about it. By the time you come back, there is a good chance you will have forgotten what troubled you in the first place."

Stamping out slavery in supply chains is difficult, with multiple layers across various nations that source raw materials or create the final product, making it hard to spot abuse.

"Consumers often don't realise that convenient low-cost products such as fast-fashion garments are cheap for a reason," Peter McAllister, head of the UK-based Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI), told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"Too often, the savings come at the expense of workers making the product."

An estimated 24.9 million people are victims of forced labour globally, and nearly one in 10 children around the world are victims of child labour, according to the International Labour Organization (ILO) and rights group Walk Free Foundation.

However, the blame does not lie solely with consumers, said Caroline Robinson, head of Focus on Labour Exploitation (FLEX).

"It is ultimately the responsibility of companies to know their supply chains, and to root out illegal and exploitative practices such as forced labour and modern slavery," she said.

(Reporting By Varsha Saraogi, Editing by Kieran Guilbert and Katy Migiro. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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