Sustainability and social behaviour are things that people should consider in Black Friday shopping, say experts.
Retailers in both the U.S. and Canada will hold sales Friday (Nov. 26) and Amy Hanser, UBC department of sociology associate professor, said a big part of Black Friday is marketers trying to convince consumers to buy. It can also lead to inappropriate behaviour, like fighting and rushes of mobs.
鈥淪ome people see it as an expression of the individualistic anti-social attitudes that consumerism cultivates,鈥 said Hanser. 鈥淚 think sometimes it鈥檚 the context, it gets revved up and I think there鈥檚 only so much at a certain price and it makes people feel like they鈥檙e going to miss out. We鈥檝e seen this actually in the context of the gas restrictions in B.C. Some people rush to get as much as they can.
鈥淚n some ways I feel like it鈥檚 not a behaviour that鈥檚 specific to Black Friday, but [it] gets organized in a way that makes some people feel like they have to fight to get their share. There鈥檚 a feeling of scarcity that underlies the desperation that some people approach Black Friday with.鈥
Kai Chan, a professor with UBC鈥檚 Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, said people will need to buy things, but should consider need.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no harm in buying it on Black Friday, despite the fact that some [non-governmental organizations] have labelled it 鈥楤uy Nothing Day鈥 and I hope that people don鈥檛 get wrought in guilt by thinking that they鈥檙e bad people if they buy those things that they need on Black Friday,鈥 said Chan. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no harm in that. Take advantage of the sales when they鈥檙e available.
鈥淭he key is [ask yourself],鈥橧s this going to be something that I will use for a long time?鈥 Or is it going to be something they use for a couple of months and likely don鈥檛 use again and it鈥檚 going to sit around and clutter my house?鈥欌
Consumers should be mindful of sustainability when heading to stores, said Juan Jose Alava, a research associate and principal investigator with the Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries Faculty of Science at UBC.
Alava pointed to the clothing industry, which is responsible for 鈥渆mitting microfibers from synthetic textiles such as nylon and polyester into the marine coastal areas and oceans,鈥 and the electronics industry, 鈥渨hich generates plastic waste from electric and electronic equipment, or e-waste,鈥 he said.
Still, the thrill of the bargain hunt makes Black Friday appealing, with some going so far to plan and strategize for maximum savings, said Hanser.
鈥淪ometimes they even plot out the store and where stuff is ahead of time and then when it actually happens it鈥檚 like, one scholar called it, 鈥楾he Great Race,鈥 this big challenge and then there鈥檚 a sense afterwards of mission accomplished, that they achieved what they were seeking to do.鈥
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