Trade body blames binge-drinking on peer pressure, not advertising

by Gemma Charles Marketing 25-Jun-08, 13:07

LONDON - Personal relationships and not advertising by drinks brands is fuelling increased binge-drinking among some young people, according to new research.

The study, commissioned by the Advertising Association, claims that social influence through networks of friends alone explains the rise in binge-drinking among some young people in the UK.

The research found clear differences in the drinking behaviour of friends of binge-drinkers compared with the drinking behaviour of friends of those who did not binge-drink.

Among binge-drinkers, 85% thought that most or all of their friends also binge-drink, compared with 41% for non-binge-drinkers. Conversely, only 3% of binge-drinkers said they have no or hardly any friends that binge-drink, compared with 22% of non-binge-drinkers.

Advertising Association chief executive Baroness Buscombe said: 'This research shows conclusively that the people around us are the key influences in terms of our relationship with alcohol, not alcohol advertising.'

 

Comments

Have your say

Only registered users may comment. Log in now or register for a free account.

* This information is required.

*
*

Forgotten password?

 

Jobs

Directory