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Banning alcohol advertising misses the point - and the objectives

18 May 2012 08:215 comments3 BizLikes
There is no doubt that South Africa has an alcohol-abuse problem. Alcohol-related problems such as foetal alcohol syndrome, physical and emotional abuse, drunk driving, severe medical conditions and a raft of social side effects are significant health and social concerns.

(Image: GCIS)
Most South Africans acknowledge the challenge we face in respect of alcohol abuse and I am broadly supportive of Health Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi's efforts in addressing most of our health issues. However, the recently unveiled Draft Control of Marketing of Alcoholic Beverages Bill reveals a worryingly sinister approach by the Department of Health on this issue.

There are two problems with the department's approach: it is almost always politically expedient to resort to banning as a form of constituency-pleasing, and the pro-banning lobby bases its position almost entirely on what is known as "social learning theory". This theory conceptualises the effect of advertising as a two-step process in which advertising increases consumption, which in turn produces more alcohol abuse and therefore more social and medical ills.

The reality

The reality is that this argument has been disproved, repeatedly and in many countries, by a long succession of research projects independent of the alcohol industry. Joseph Fisher, an American research professional specialising in alcohol, compiled and published a worldwide survey entitled "Advertising, alcohol consumption, and abuse" - a broad collection of studies from all available markets published as the most comprehensive and authoritative review of the subject in existence.

The body of research on the relationship between alcohol and consumption is large and varied - even when the research of alcohol manufacturers and interest groups is excluded.


(Image: Tim Parkinson, via Wikimedia Commons)
In this summary, I cover 22 studies from the USA, Canada, the UK, Germany, France and Australia, as well as more than 740 research papers, journals, articles and government publications from all over the world.

In essence they investigate the relationship between alcohol advertising and consumption, as well as the relationship between advertising and alcohol experimentation. They also cover the relationship between advertising regulations and restrictions, warning labels and advertised warning messages and consumption, as well as the relationship between advertising exposure and negative behaviour such as drinking and driving.

A tenuous link between advertising and consumption

The studies have found that moderate warning messages are the best short- and long-term deterrents to excessive alcohol consumption. The link between advertising and alcohol consumption is, at best, tenuous.

A series of experimental and other consumption-correlation measures showed that the average effect of advertising on consumption was below 1, 5% of total volume. This is an additional one-and-a-half drinks per 100 consumed.

There are three highly acknowledged, independent, quasi-experimental studies examining the relationship between advertising exposure, intoxication and abuse. The association between advertising and negative or anti-social behaviour was measured at 0.2%, 0.8% and 1.2% respectively, an average of 0.5%. Of far greater importance were the differential associations with drinking peers, and parental and peer approval.

Exactly the opposite to what one would expect

The relationship between alcohol advertising and at-risk groups throws up one interesting result: no correlation was noted with the repeated exception of abuser groups (alcoholics and heavy users). A large body of work demonstrates a causative link between these users and exposure to advertising - in the inverse. In other words, alcohol advertising strengthens the resolve of alcoholics not to drink, rather than the reverse.


(Image: Wikimedia Commons)
So, if advertising has such a negligible effect on consumption, why do South African manufacturers spend more than R2bn a year on it? This question goes to the heart of the purpose of the advertising industry. The answer is that in a competitive marketplace, manufacturers must fight for category and brand share.

Banning alcohol advertising will have the unintended effect of stifling competition within categories and entrenching dominant players. Existing players will maintain their market share while launching new brands to stimulate competition will be impossible. Having worked in advertising in the tobacco industry when the advertising ban was introduced, I have seen this myself.

The ban will bite - but not only as intended

A ban will force manufacturers to allocate large chunks of their advertising, R&D and marketing budgets to their operating profit, a significant proportion of which will find its way back to offshore shareholders as increased dividends. A ban on advertising will shut out the small entrepreneur fighting for a tiny share of the liquor market. Most importantly, an advertising ban will hurt employment opportunities in the alcohol, advertising, media and related industries - and probably even destroy existing jobs in those sectors.

Our high levels of alcohol abuse are related to many factors that need to be addressed elsewhere - primarily in the restoration of the family unit and social fabric so deeply fractured by apartheid - and in all the levers and interventions that go with that.

Banning alcohol advertising is not the answer.
 
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About the author

Justin McCarthy is managing director, TBWA Durban
Arregante Storbeck
Well with the country we live in what else is there to give one some relaxation.But yes we are a country of Bing drinking. When you talk about being social there is always alc involved. But to ban commercials is not the answer, you dont get a urge to drink when you see and advert. It will help in decision making the next time your at the shop though . Posted on 18 May 2012 11:32
Molefi Moloantoa
Some of the most well thought out adverts are alcohol involved. Banning the advertising of alcohol is the answer. Instead, focus on a better manner of alcohol consumption.
@mo_on_digital for more views on beer Posted on 18 May 2012 15:23
Michel Mashego
Knowing the problem does not solve it. Sure the ban may not do much for societal imbalances and ills, but neither do ATL campaigns which seem to only reach top end LSM groups. The big players need to commit&invest more to helping educate their consumers. Current efforts are clearly not enough. Despite the 'proven' correlation between label warnings and alc abuse...SA demographics do present a different ball game. You're dealing with a large number of illiterate people who cannot or don't care to read. Law enforcement which is dysfunctional..at best! The big boys should man up and take steps to really penetrate into communities/taverns/homes/schools/clubs etc. We're all responsible for this one. Posted on 18 May 2012 16:18
Matewis
"In other words, alcohol advertising strengthens the resolve of alcoholics not to drink, rather than the reverse."

So what you are saying is that when an alcoholic drives by a billboard with a massive golden, crispy beer with those tiny little bubbles racing to the foamy white goal area, said alcoholic will get the compulsion not to drink?

Perhaps he will zone in on the fine print and read “drink responsibly” and decide to do so. I doubt it.

We all know what a brainwashing tool advertising is.

What the alcohol companies want you to see is happy people having a blast with a drink in their hands. Although this does happen in reality it is not a true reflection of alcohol and its effects. Whose responsibility is it to balance these kinds of imagery with reality? And do they have the budgets to compete with the advertising budgets of the alcohol industry?

I agree that alcohol abuse is the symptom of other deep rooted problems. Banning advertising of alcohol will have a positive effect if only marginal.

Hey, another thing we can blame on apartheid! Woohoo!! Posted on 20 May 2012 12:46
Donald Mokgale
Unemployment is a collosal problem in the country, how will banning alcohol advertising aid this problem? If banning alcohol advertising will only have a marginal positive effect, is this worth destroying thousands of lives who will be looking for jobs most of which, I infer, are bread winners?

Yes I agree as well that alcohol abuse is a symptom of other deep rooted problems, so what has the Government done to deal with these? Banning alcohol advertising sounds like an escapist's route to me because it's the deep rooted problems that have a greater impact on social mis-behaviour rather than advertising. All the stakeholders should come together in dealing with the problems as curt warning labels do nothing to the illiterate in Kwamashu. All big brands should take responsibility by running educational campaigns with the government about alcohol abuse and the like.

Banning is certainly not the way to go, but all stakeholders should come together to find ways to combat the social ills that come with alcohol. Posted on 19 Jun 2012 14:06
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