US Businesses Overseas Threatened by Rising Anti-Americanism
by
Jim Lobe
The
Bush administration's foreign policy may be costing U.S. corporations
business overseas according to a new survey of 8,000 international
consumers released this week by the Seattle-based Global
Market Insite (GMI) Inc.
Brands
closely identified with the U.S., such as Marlboro cigarettes, America
Online (AOL), McDonald's, American Airlines, and Exxon-Mobil are
particularly at risk. GMI, an independent market research company,
conducted the survey in eight countries December 1012 with
consumers over the Internet.
One
third of all consumers in Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan,
Russia, and the United Kingdom said that U.S. foreign policy, particularly
the "war on terror" and the occupation of Iraq, constituted
their strongest impression of the United States.
Twenty
percent of respondents in Europe and Canada said they consciously
avoided buying U.S. products as a protest against those policies.
That finding was consistent with a similar poll carried out by GMI
three weeks after Bush's November election victory.
"Unfortunately,
current American foreign policy is viewed by international consumers
as a significant negative, when it used to be a positive,"
according to Dr. Mitchell Eggers, GMI's chief operating officer
and chief pollster.
"Some
American brands become closely connected to their country of origin
and are quintessentially American," he added. "They represent
the American lifestyle, innovation, power, leadership, and foreign
policy."
Whether
the U.S. foreign policy under Bush is affecting the sales of U.S.
corporations overseas is being hotly debated by advertising and
public relations firms, as well as the companies themselves. Last
month, Kevin Roberts, chief executive of advertising giant Saatchi
& Saatchi, told the Financial Times that he believed consumers
in Europe and Asia were becoming increasingly resistant to having
"brand America rammed down their throats."
Simon
Anholt, author of Brand
America has also predicted a consumer backlash against
U.S. foreign policy. He recently told the British trade magazine,
Marketing Week, that four more years of Bush's foreign policy
could have grave consequences for U.S. companies' international
market share.
"There
have already been casual protest brands, such as Mecca Cola, which
are primarily political," he told the weekly. "But things
are now moving beyond that. For instances, German restaurants are
beginning to refuse American Express cards. This is new territory."
Other
analysts have been skeptical, arguing that recent declines in sales
in France and Germany by McDonald's, Coca-Cola, and Marlboro were
due far more to other factors, including flagging economies in both
countries or a simple failure by companies to adapt rapidly enough
to consumer tastes.
But
the new survey, as well as the one taken by GMI last month, suggests
that the unpopularity of U.S. foreign policy may indeed be playing
a role, at least for companies that are either strongly identified
with the United States or that are perceived as having similar characteristics
as its foreign policy.
"American
companies are accused of aggressiveness and arrogance because they
insist on imposing the American way of doing things on their international
markets; they are inflexible," according to Allyson Stewart-Allen,
co-author of Working
With Americans, a business best-seller published by Prentice
Hall in 2002.
She
argued that the more U.S. companies distance themselves from their
U.S. identity, the better they will survive in the international
marketplace. "U.S. companies abroad now need to focus on adding
yet more value and repositioning their brands to consumers in the
intensely competitive global village in which they compete"
"The
more aligned they are with those customers regardless of their
U.S.-created DNA they'll win." American companies need to
focus on alignment with international markets and embrace their
market differences and idiosyncrasies.
The
survey cited 40 U.S.-based companies and asked consumers who said
they were trying to avoid buying U.S. brands to rate each one of
them by how closely they were identified with being "American,"
and whether or not they deliberately avoided buying their products.
The
survey then plotted each company's position on a quadrant divided
into "safe" and "insulated" squares at the bottom
and "at risk" and "problem squares" at the top.
Those
deemed "safe" or "insulated" generally were
either not seen as particularly "American" (Visa, Kodak,
Kleenex or Gillette), or they apparently lacked real competition
(Microsoft, Heinz, and Disney).
Visa
was the single best performer: only 17 percent of consumers identified
as intending to avoid U.S. brands thought that it was "extremely
American," and only 15 percent said they intended to boycott
it. Fifty-four percent said they had used Visa at least once in
the previous month.
"Problem"
companies, on the other hand, included those which more than a third
of boycotting consumers said they intended to avoid, and more than
40 percent of consumers said they considered to be "extremely
American."
On
that scale, Marlboro was found to be the most problematic. Sixty
percent of respondents said they avoided the product, while two-thirds
said they considered it to be "extremely American." Only
McDonald's had a higher "American" score, at 73 percent,
but only 42 percent of respondents said they avoided the Golden
Arches.
In
contrast to Visa's performance, 48 percent of boycotting consumers
said they would definitely avoid using American Express; 64 percent
said they thought the company was "extremely American,"
and only two percent reported using it during the previous month.
Other
problem brands included Exxon-Mobil, AOL, American, Chevron Texaco,
United Airlines, Budweiser, Chrysler, Barbie Doll, Starbucks, and
General Motors.
The
latest poll found that more than two thirds of European and Canadian
consumers have had a negative change in their view of the United
States as a result of U.S. foreign policy over the last three years.
Nearly half believe that the war in Iraq was motivated by a desire
to control oil supplies, while only 15 percent believed it was related
to terrorism.
Nearly
two thirds of European and Canadian consumers also said they believe
U.S. foreign policy is guided primarily by self-interest and empire-building,
while only 17 percent believe that the defense of freedom and democracy
is its guiding principle.
Half
of the entire sample said they distrusted U.S. companies, at least
in part because of the U.S. foreign policy. Seventy-nine percent
said they distrusted the U.S. government for the same reason, while
39 percent said they distrusted the American public.
December
30, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 One World
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