Fair measurement for shoppers
Rules for consumer protection are needed to ensure that buyers of goods get a fair
deal. Today in Britain there are many organisations that aim to protect the consumer
and these organisations face a wide range of issues ranging from mis-sold financial
services through safety issues to scams with timeshare holiday flats. Unfortunately
no consumer protection organisation has taken seriously the fact that measurement
unit confusion in Britain can result in a bad deal for the consumer.
In most countries, there are few consumer protection issues associated
with measurement; one single system of measurement is in use and there is little
room for confusion. Britain with its painfully slow and incomplete transition from
imperial to metric has carelessly opened the door to misleading practices.
There is no fundamental difference between pricing in metric and imperial providing
only one system is used consistently everywhere. Today’s mixture of metric and imperial
units makes it tempting to choose a unit in order to appear most attractive. Thus
since a pound is less than a kilogram, or a litre is less than a gallon, advertising
the same price in terms of the smaller unit means that the quoted price has a smaller
number and thus seems cheaper. Thus 40p per lb gives the impression of being less
than 88 p per kg even although they are the same price!
Why else were filling stations so keen to replace gallons with litres in the ‘eighties’?
Why else have some traders been so reluctant to replace pounds with kilograms in
the ‘noughties’?
With offering price reductions the converse is true. Offering 18 p off a gallon
of petrol sounds like a better reduction than 4 p off a litre although equivalent.
Furthermore since a customer cannot relate the gallon reduction to the litre price
at the pump he or she really do not know what they are gaining.
Given this situation the UK Metric Association (UKMA) aims to stand against practices
that exploit confused measurement to the detriment of the consumer. Furthermore
UKMA stands for improvement of current British regulation to ensure better consumer
protection.
UKMA stands for four key principles to protect the consumer with respect to measurement:
- Standard units of measurement to allow accurate comparison of like goods with like;
- A standardised unit price to support price transparency;
- Standard units of measurement and clear rules for quantitative information in product
descriptions and adverts;
- For goods measured at the point of sale: properly calibrated measuring instruments
to ensure that what is measured fairly represents what is requested.
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