Advertising is usually seen as a great platform for economic
growth. However, this is not without massive social costs.
It is believed by many industry experts and consumers that
advertising is a medium of promotion that frequently uses psychological
pressure and highlights feelings of inadequacy that in actual don’t exist at
all.

Advertising encourages the demand of new products and
services but the manner in which they are portrayed suggests that the users
need to buy and use them to feel “high” and a wrong image of demands or mirage
is created. In other words, advertising and efforts made to improve online presence of a website suggest
that using a particular product or service can help consumers experience
health, fitness, social status, reputation, acceptability, identity, rewards,
comforts, happiness, and self-esteem and this approach to selling products is
extremely harmful to say the least.
One of the biggest drawbacks of advertising aimed at young
people and children is that it tends to increasingly reduce young people to
consumers. Unhealthy habits are quickly passed on to as symbols of status and
acceptability. High sugar and high fat foods that cause obesity are portrayed
to young consumers as the “real or macho” products.