Gymcelled
Genetically shackled to hell
★★★★★
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2019
- Posts
- 11,121
Quick and short post. We hear all the time that women are incredibly oppressed economically. If that were true then surely they wouldn't be big consumers right? Surely they wouldn't have much buying power?
Have you ever heard of ANY oppressed class in ANY culture at ANY time in history that had this much buying power? Does this sound like someone who's oppressed?
And the 70-80% figure isn't even the worst one. This paper cites a figure of 85%: Factors affecting Purchase behavior of Women grocery consumer- An Insight
85% of all consumer spending comes from women jfl, the supposed destitute class
Source:
All of this comes from a Forbes article on how to market to women
Women are such great consumers. No wonder they had to be """LIBERATED"""
- Women drive 70-80% of all consumer purchasing decisions.
- 94% of women between the ages of 15-35 spend over an hour per day shopping online.
Have you ever heard of ANY oppressed class in ANY culture at ANY time in history that had this much buying power? Does this sound like someone who's oppressed?
And the 70-80% figure isn't even the worst one. This paper cites a figure of 85%: Factors affecting Purchase behavior of Women grocery consumer- An Insight
85% of all consumer spending comes from women jfl, the supposed destitute class
- Mother’s Day spending is expected to reach a record $25 billion in 2019, up from $23.1 billion in 2018.
- The top homebuyers after married couples are single women (18%, double the percentage for single men at 9%).
- 70% of travel consumers are women.
- 85% of women say that if they like a brand, they will remain loyal to it.
Source:
All of this comes from a Forbes article on how to market to women
Women are such great consumers. No wonder they had to be """LIBERATED"""
I also decided to look into Mother's Day vs Father's Day because anyone who's blackpilled would assume that Father's Day would get mogged since people don't care about men or fathers these days.
OH LOOK WHAT A SURPRISE
OH LOOK WHAT A SURPRISE
According to the National Retail Federation, 2015 Father’s Day consumers in the United States will spend $115.57 per person, totaling $12.7 billion compared to the $21.2 billion spent on Mother’s Day. The gap between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day spending continues to widen as Mother’s Day spending hit a new all-time high this year, the second time in three years this record has been broken.
Only one year since 2002 has Father’s Day spending per person been higher than Mother’s Day.
Father’s Day vs. Mother’s Day Spending
According to the National Retail Federation, 2015 Father’s Day consumers in the United States will spend $115.57 per person, totaling $12.7 billion compared to the $21.2 billion spent on Mother’s D…
biwizard.wordpress.com
Why We're Still Not Spending Enough on Mother's Day
Seventy-seven percent of Americans are expected to celebrate Father’s Day this Sunday, according to a survey from the National Retail Federation. But that’s fewer people, with less economic enthusiasm, than the millions who were forecast to commemorate Mother’s Day five weeks prior.
morningconsult.com