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What the Target Boycott Says About the Power of Consumers

What the Target Boycott Says About the Power of Consumers

Consumers have long channeled their buying power to express political beliefs, whether it’s selling their Teslas, avoiding a certain retailer, or goods from a particular country. We look at the power of the consumer boycott, and why this one seems to be working.

KQED's Forum

May 28, 202555m 52s

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Show Notes

Retailers are now facing a lot of headwinds, including tariffs and a drop in consumer confidence. But for Target, once affectionately known by customers as Tar-jay, a consumer boycott in response to the company’s decision to drop some DEI initiatives has been an added drag. In its most recent earnings call, the retailer reported a 3.8% drop in sales and lowered its earnings targets for the year. Consumers have long channeled their buying power to express political beliefs, whether it’s selling their Teslas, avoiding a certain retailer, or goods from a particular country. We look at the power of the consumer boycott, and why this one seems to be working.


Guests:


Amanda Mull, columnist, Bloomberg; Wrote the column “Buying Power” on American consumerism.


Alex Ossola, host/producer, Wall Street Journal; Ossola's most recent podcast is called "Boycotting Target".


Americus Reed II, professor of marketing, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

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