As the global reputation of US brands slips, some US firms are turning to unusual marketing strategies. Coca-Cola, for instance, is now promoting itself as a "German product."
It’s not correct in this case. Which is also easily researchable on the internet.
Coca-Cola in Germany is bottled in many different plants locally, by the biggest Coca-Cola bottling company worldwide. It is a british company licensing the use of the brand and name from the US Coca-Cola company, but a separate entity.
That is something different from processed and packaged, which you talked about in your first comment.
Of course not, most ingredients however will be EU produced/processed and then processed into the final drinks in Germany.
But aside from pure agricultural product, almost no product would be “product of Germany” if using no imports would be the requirement to use that lable.
Then you didn’t read my comment carefully, because my point is that ONLY a product that is ENTIRELY produced in a single country should be marketed as such.
So what are you proposing exactly? Should the be forced to put a “invented in USA” after the “made in Germany”? I really don’t see the point.
Just because there isn’t an obvious single-sentence solution to a problem doesn’t mean there isn’t a problem
Solution to what problem, though?
It’s made in Germany (and that’s not even relevant) and is subject to German and EU food safety standards.
The problem of companies misleading customers through marketing
Except there is nothing misleading about claiming a product is “made in Germany” when it is in fact made in Germany.
Agree to disagree I guess
Standardized product labeling:
🤔
I wonder why you are so triggered, but ok.
In my country they are, for example, allowed to state that their product is made here even if it is ONLY processed and packaged here.
Assuming this is the same situation (and I’d be very surprised if it isn’t), “product of Germany” is false and should not be allowed.
It’s not correct in this case. Which is also easily researchable on the internet.
Coca-Cola in Germany is bottled in many different plants locally, by the biggest Coca-Cola bottling company worldwide. It is a british company licensing the use of the brand and name from the US Coca-Cola company, but a separate entity.
So all the ingredients are produced in Germany too?
That is something different from processed and packaged, which you talked about in your first comment.
Of course not, most ingredients however will be EU produced/processed and then processed into the final drinks in Germany.
But aside from pure agricultural product, almost no product would be “product of Germany” if using no imports would be the requirement to use that lable.
Then you didn’t read my comment carefully, because my point is that ONLY a product that is ENTIRELY produced in a single country should be marketed as such.
All the rest is pure marketing lies.