| NEWS
RELEASE
Whittier College
Office of Public
Relations
13406 Philadelphia St.
P.O. Box 634
Whittier, CA
90608-0634
June 11,
2004
Reference: 03/04: 54
Contact: Caroline Heldman at (562) 907-4200, ext.
4371 (poll questions)
Judy Browning at (562) 907-4216 (other questions)
POLL SHOWS SUPERMARKETS FACING TROUBLE AFTER STRIKE:
FREQUENT SHOPPERS PLUNGE
The latest Field Research Corporation poll finds that
the number of Southern Californians who frequently shop
at Ralphs, Albertsons, Pavilions, and Vons supermarkets
has fallen off dramatically after the recent supermarket
strike by the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW)
union. The percentage of people who say they shop at
these supermarkets “very frequently” fell from 47
percent prior to the strike to 32 percent now, two
months after the end of the strike.
“Shoppers continue to patronize the supermarkets
involved in the strike,” said Caroline Heldman,
assistant professor of political science at Whittier
College and principal investigator for the project, “but
a surprising number are doing so with less frequency.
These supermarkets have lost a third of their frequent
shoppers, and the fact that this plunge is persistent
two months after the strike ended suggests trouble for
these grocers.”
This statistical data is based on a random sample of
Southern California adults. The questions were added to
Field Research Corporation’s statewide Field Poll
survey and asked only of those adults living in the
10-county Southern California area. The poll was
fielded on May 18 – 24, 2004.
While the percentage of respondents who say they shop at
these stores “very frequently” declined, those who say
they shop “somewhat frequently” increased from 20
percent to 30 percent. Southern Californians who shop
at these supermarkets “not too frequently” also
increased from pre- to post-strike (19% to 26%). There
was no change in the percentage of people who say they
do not shop at these grocers at all.
“Some shoppers may also be punishing the supermarkets
involved in the strike,” Heldman said, “but a better
explanation is that shoppers found other stores to
patronize during the strike, such as Costco or Trader
Joe’s, and they are continuing to shop with these
retailers. It is clear that customer loyalty to these
supermarkets has diminished, even in the absence of
picket lines.”
MOST SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIANS BOYCOTTED DURING THE STRIKE
Sixty-eight percent of shoppers fully or partially
boycotted the supermarkets during the strike.
Twenty-three percent say their shopping decreased during
the strike, and 33% say they stopped shopping altogether
for the duration of the strike. Twelve percent of
respondents stopped shopping at these stores for part of
the strike, but then started again. One-in-four people,
or 24%, say their shopping patterns stayed the same
during the strike, and three percent say their shopping
increased.
“The outpouring of citizen action during this
strike/boycott reflects a national upward trend in
consumer activism, such as boycotts,” Heldman said.
“Consumer activism has been around since before the
nation’s founding as evidenced by the Boston Tea Party
and other acts of consumer rebellion, but in the last
two decades, rates of consumer activism have
skyrocketed, jumping about 15 percent since 1980.”
Heldman said almost two-thirds of Americans now engage
in at least one boycott on an annual basis. “The number
of Southern Californians who participated in the recent
supermarket strike is high but not unusual considering
the increasing popularity of consumer activism in the
United States.”
WOMEN MORE LIKELY TO
BOYCOTT THAN MEN
The poll showed that women were more likely than men to
altogether boycott the supermarkets during the strike
(37% compared to 30%). Heldman said “this difference
reflects a long tradition of women using their consumer
dollars to further social and political ends.”
UNION HOUSEHOLDS MORE
LIKELY TO BOYCOTT
Not surprisingly, Southern Californians with a union
member in their household were much more likely than
others to altogether boycott the targeted supermarkets
during the entire strike (45% compared to 30%).
KERRY SUPPORTERS
BOYCOTTED AT TWICE THE RATE OF BUSH SUPPORTERS
Political differences were found in terms of people who
boycotted the supermarkets for the duration of the
strike. People who said they plan to vote for Kerry in
the presidential election were almost twice as likely
than Bush supporters to have altogether boycotted the
supermarkets (47% compared to 24%). This gap mirrors
political party differences in terms of registered
Democrats (44%) and Republicans (28%) who altogether
boycotted these stores during the entire strike.
Additional differences
were also found in terms of household income, location
in Southern California, political ideology, and
education. For more information on the poll or The
Consumer Activism Project (T-CAP), contact Heldman at
(562) 907-4200, ext. 4371, or visit our website at
http://web.whittier.edu/academic/politicalscience/tcap.htm.
Located 18 miles east of Los Angeles, Whittier College
is an independent, four-year college offering
traditional liberal arts majors and strong
pre-professional programs taught in the context of the
liberal arts. Whittier Law School, which is accredited
by the American Bar Association and is a member of the
Association of American Law Schools, is located on a
separate campus in Costa Mesa. We ask that you properly
attribute this information to The Consumer Activism
Project sponsored by Whittier College.
Field Research Corporation Methodology
This statistical data is based on a random sample of
Southern California adults. The questions were added
to Field Research Corporation’s statewide Field
Poll survey and asked only of those adults living
in the 10-county Southern California area.
Interviewing was conducted by telephone using a random
digit dial sample methodology in either English or
Spanish between the period of May 18 – 24, 2004.
The survey was completed among a representative sample
of 623 Southern California adults age 18 or older
living. According to statistical theory, 95% of the
time results from the overall sample would have a
sampling error of +/- 4.1 percentage points. Results
based on sub-groups of the overall sample would have
somewhat larger sampling error estimates.
There are many other possible sources of error other
than sampling variability in this and any other public
opinion survey. Different results could occur because
of differences in question working, sequencing, or
through undetected errors or omissions in sampling,
interviewing or data processing. The Field
professionals working on this study did everything
possible to minimize such errors.
Respondents to the poll were asked the following
questions:
The next few questions are about the recent four-month
long supermarket strike in Southern California. This
strike involved the UFCW union and Ralphs, Albertsons,
Pavilions, Vons and Safeway supermarkets.
-- Prior to the recent supermarket strike, in general,
would you say that you shopped at these stores very
frequently, somewhat frequently, not too frequently or
not at all?
-- During the recent supermarket strike, would you say
that your trips to these supermarkets increased,
stayed the same, decreased, stopped altogether,
stopped for part of the strike but then started again,
or something else?
-- Now that the strike is over, in general, would you
say that you plan to shop at Ralphs, Albertsons,
Pavilions, Vons, and/or Safeway stores very
frequently, somewhat frequently, not too frequently or
not at all?
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