2007/08/15

i'm a plastic bag

We hate plastic bags. Those bags we carry out of supermarkets everyday end up accumulating in landfills and damaging our environment. Conservation groups have urged the government to discourage the use of plastic bags and are winning widening support from the public. One of their proposals is to introduce a tax on plastic bags, or plastax. That's a fixed amount of taxation for every bag consumed. To many, it sounds to be a good idea to affect the behavior of thrifty households. But i have a different theory.

What is a plastic bag? Why supermarkets give it for free?

Isn't a plastic bag a free gift a supermarket gives for customers' convenience? Obviously, negative. Business is anything but philanthropy. Take a convenience store as an example. The cashier almost always asks whether you need a bag or not. If your answer is negative, he is trained to please you with a loud slogan: "Thank you for caring the environment." Indeed, the owner of the convenience store thanks you for saving him a bag. In the supermarket, the cashier never asks that question. Neither does he say anything to encourage you to refuse a bag.

Why the convenience store and the supermarket take different attitudes toward a plastic bag? The answer is, from the convenience store, you seldom buy more than you need, whereas, from the supermarket, you do. In the convenience store, you grasp a bottle of soft drink and some snacks, and go, because you know if you need anything else, you may always find another convenience store within a few footsteps. The convenience store chain knows they cannot make you buy more than you need, except, an extra chocolate bar and that's it.

Supermarket business is a different game. We go to supermarket to buy anything. We do have a shopping list or some idea what we need in advance. But we often get more than we need. Some economists or business gurus attribute the excessive purchase to the successful marketing strategies and the tactics of store layout. But few people observe the pragmatic bottom line. "How are we going to carry the extra stuff out of the supermarket?" Have you ever asked such a question? i never.

Without plastic bags, the amount of stuff purchased is limited to the size of your own bag. And the size of your bag depends on what you plan to buy before leaving home. Now, fully accustomed to the infinite supply of plastic bags, free of charge, that question is pointless. Supermarket knows it. Plastic bags are not for you to carry the stuff you need. They are to carry the stuff you don't need. That's why, unlike convenience store, supermarket never praises you for "caring the environment".

Supermarket wants you to understand that you don't have to worry about carrying the extra stuff even though you are not prepared to carry them. Then, it wants you to walk proudly out to the street, carrying its bags.

Have you ever noticed that there are two different kinds of plastic bags in supermarket? The obvious one is that cashier supplies, on both sides of which is printed with big and bright logo of the supermarket. The less obvious, but as common, is the smaller one that wraps wet stuff like meat, fish and vegetables. This one is faceless, all white without any logo or graphic design. Why are the two kinds so different? The answer is the faceless one sits inside the bright one when you walk out to the street and doesn't show up.

If you believe that a labeled bag is for you to distinguish what being bought from where, you are wrong. Of course, the label does serve such a purpose, but it cannot be the reason for the label to exist in the first place. A labeled bag is for other people to see, for advertising.

Remember the last time you brought a T-shirt and received an oversized carton sack from the boutique. Nothing advertises better than showing someone else is buying. Take a gas station as another example. Gasoline is the least sexy product apart from electricity. Unlike the monopolistic utility companies, gasoline companies compete with each other, if not in pricing. There is no way to tell which car has had its tank filled up by which gas company. The "labeled bag" strategy cannot work because there needs no bag. However, the marketing people do a little trick.

Gas stations give out free boxes of tissue paper with their logos printed on it. Naturally, you put the little box behind the backseat. And, by doing so, you do the gas station a favor by broadcasting an advertisement about the gas station. The audience is all the drivers behind you.

When you walk out to the street carrying the plastic bag of the supermarket, you do the advertising for the supermarket. The more bags you carry, the more physically challenged you look, the better.

i buy more than i need. i help it advertise. Plastic bag and i cannot be separated. From supermarket's viewpoint, i am a plastic bag.

It is the supermarket, not the consumer, who loves plastic bags. Imagine the government launches plastax and the number of consumers who accept plastic bags drops drastically. What would happen in the supermarket? First, shoppers have to leave behind some of the stuff they otherwise would purchase because they haven't prepared enough bags of their own. Second, they all come out the supermarket without a single hint at whether they have bought anything. Turning the street corner, nobody even knows they have ever shopped at where. If you were one of the supermarket owners, would you let that happen?

Supermarkets will do anything to protect plastic bags. For example, they would bear the cost of plastax. They would give out bonuses or coupons to keep you using plastic bags. As long as the plastax is lower than the cost of those bags made of recyclable and environment-friendly materials, supermarkets will keep plastic bags. The bottom-line is you can buy as much as you want and help do the advertising.

Then, all parties are happy, except smaller grocery shops and the start-ups. These smaller competitors don't have the resources to bear the cost of plastax. Neither can they upgrade the bag materials. In the end, plastax will stop small shops from providing customers' convenience, but it cannot stop supermarkets from giving out plastic bags. i believe plastax is one of the many examples that laws and regulations create unnecessarily biased business environment against entrepreneurs and in favor of big firms.

Quamnet column

8 則留言:

匿名 說...

Your post, whilst interesting, is somewhat irrelevant to the ongoing debate regarding Supermarkets and shopping bags.

1)Supermarkets advertise or brand themselves on plastic bags. They can surely do the same with paper bags, or bags made from other material.

2)The availability of bags/containers undoubtedly give shoppers the ability to carry more with them. But the limiting factor here is really how much a person carry. With the wide availability of delivery services, the ability to carry is becoming a non issue these day. Also, supermarkets can provide paper bags, etc,

Actually, I am AGAINST this current campaign of not giving out plastic bags. The reason is simple. You think about where all these plastic bags go when you bring them home. All the plastic bags we use at home are re-used as garbage bags at home. Every single one of them. If supermarkets stop giving them out, that means I will have to BUY them in the supermarket.

The net effect is, I use the same amount of plastic bags. It is just that I pay for it directly instead.....

So, the net effect is, Supermarket gives out less plastic bags, but sells a lot more of them..

匿名 說...

Dear anonymous, thank you for your comment.

tabo 說...

"All the plastic bags we use at home are re-used as garbage bags at home. Every single one of them"

i don't think so wor. what about the small ones ? i use the big one but throw away the small ones.

"If supermarkets stop giving them out, that means I will have to BUY them in the supermarket. "

I think it's nice to pay everything u need. supposed everyone buy(pay) sth when they NEED them.

匿名 說...

"i don't think so wor. what about the small ones ? i use the big one but throw away the small ones."

Precisely my point. Before people go around talking supermarkets policies of giving out plastic bag, the first thing they should do is to examine their own usage habits.

Even the smallest bag can be used as a garbage bag for your bathroom bin or your study's bin. Be creative.

If you are throwing out your small bags, this is a user problem, not the supermarket's problem.

"I think it's nice to pay everything u need. supposed everyone buy(pay) sth when they NEED them. "

Well, who do you think are paying for the "free" supermarket plastic bags right now? You are. Just that you are paying it via the profit the supermarket is making from selling you regular merchandise.

If they start asking for a fee for plastic bags, all that means is that you will be paying for these bags DIRECTLY. Oh..the supermarkets will also earn a good profit margin on them AND not have to give you plastic bags from their own pockets.

tabo 說...

"Even the smallest bag can be used as a garbage bag for your bathroom bin or your study's bin. Be creative.
If you are throwing out your small bags, this is a user problem, not the supermarket's problem."

nice , so u think there is a more effective way to change ppl's habit? would u mind to share with us?

"If they start asking for a fee for plastic bags, all that means is that you will be paying for these bags DIRECTLY. Oh..the supermarkets will also earn a good profit margin on them AND not have to give you plastic bags from their own pockets."

do u really think that u r not paying the plastic bags now ?i do think its naive to think so. to me , supermarket earns more with selling plastic bag is not a problem. u can choose to bring your own bag .

cheers

匿名 說...

Even if you use the plastic bag twice, it remains something that cannot be recycled.

The logic of who pays for whom doesn't really matter. More important is nothing can stop supermarkets from using plastic as long as it is cheaper than paper or anything else less pollutant.

Thank you for the thoughtful opinions from both of you. This blog has never seen exchanges of idea more exciting than this.

匿名 說...

"nice , so u think there is a more effective way to change ppl's habit? would u mind to share with us?"

I think it is absurd for us to ignore that the first and eaiest step re-using plastic bags. Why are we even discussing governement policy when we ourselves are throwing out small plastic bags?

"do u really think that u r not paying the plastic bags now ?i do think its naive to think so. to me , supermarket earns more with selling plastic bag is not a problem. u can choose to bring your own bag ."

I am saying precisely that we are already paying for the bags via the margins the supermarkets make on good sold. Now, if supermarkets were to stop giving them out, I will need to be BUYING the same amount of plastic bags with my own money. The key point here is not who is paying (as T freak mention), but that I will be using the same amount of plastic bags anyways.

If you are look at Ireland which is the forerunner with plastic bags reduction, you can see that they have reduced usage by something like 95% for plastic shopping bags. But if you dig big deeper, various sources have cited that plastic usage in Ireland have gone up as people BUY thicker plastic bags as bin-liners. The paper bags being used are thrown out, actually increasing the volume of packaging sent to landfills.

So what happens if Hong Kong goes through with a plastic bag tax?

1) Government get some plastic taxes.
2) Supermarkets save some money on giving you plastic bags. (or maybe paper bags are more expensive, I am not sure).
3) Supermarket SELLS you more bin-liners, and make some profits.
4) Plastic bag makers now focus on selling you bin-liners.
5) Paper bags/alternate bag makers enjoy improved revenue.
6) Consumers spend more money buying bin-liners. Consumers have less convenience with BYOB policies.
7) The environment more or less see the same the same amount of plastic bags, as people still use plastic bags as bin-liners.

Now if we have composter in Hong Kong, then maybe we can solve this issue...but our recylcing program is not even that popular....

tabo 說...

hmmm, its almost time to sleep
a few more words

1."Why are we even discussing governement policy when we ourselves are throwing out small plastic bags?"

I think it boz i m educated but no one had ever taught me how to re-use a small plastic bag.(I tried but i don't find it useful most of the time.(and time is more precious)

there are so many ppl throw away their small p-bags like me( I tried to collect them but end up throwing them away every month) do you have better idea to change the situation?

2.according to the book "freakonomics", ppl tends to pay it after they think that they can doing sth "immoral" with a price. yes, i don't think you can change ppl's habbit with using plastic bags. but u can control it.

3.environment protection is always about education. look at japan, north europe, its the people that made the difference. WHY hongkongers use so many plastic bag? boz we do not have the concept of WASTAGE. we buy ANYTHING and throw them away.

4.I don't really care about your point 1-6 (nothing to do with the environment) . but in your last point you said"The environment more or less see the same". I doubt it. maybe. but I do not see a better idea here.

nice blog
nice talking to you guys