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Consumer groups urge FTC action on deceptive earnings claims

Andy Spears
2 min readMay 13, 2022
Photo by Alexander Mils on Unsplash

Consumer Federation of America (CFA) responded to a request for comment from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) on proposed regulations around deceptive earnings claims. Specifically, CFA called out gig economy companies, multi-level marketing firms, and for-profit colleges for practices that deceive individuals into believing they’ll be able to live a certain lifestyle by using their products. Unfortunately, CFA notes, these claims often turn out to be unsubstantiated.

The FTC announced in February it is considering regulatory action to restrict such claims and subsequently called for comment on proposed rules.

In a comment letter, CFA called for specific action to require substantiation of earnings in marketing claims.

“99% of multilevel marketing recruits lose money,” the comment letter states, citing a 2011 statistic from the Consumer Awareness Institute. The comment letter also points to unsubstantiated and evidence-free earnings claims by gig-economy companies and explains how these companies target minorities and women. CFA joins NCL in asking the FTC to regulate companies making these claims by requiring substantiated data prior to making…

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Andy Spears

Writer and policy advocate living in Nashville, TN —Public Policy Ph.D. — writes on education policy, consumer affairs, and more . . .