Proclamation 5765 --
National Consumers Week, 1988
By
the President of the
A
Proclamation
Across
our Nation and around the world, consumers are sending business an important
message: there is no substitute for good service, the kind on which companies
make their reputations. Under free enterprise, we consumers express our views
through our everyday marketplace decisions and require businesses to adapt to
our changing consumer choices.
The
flexibility of American economic freedom opens the door to many opportunities
for consumers and businesses. Both profit from today's increased emphasis on
service. Customer-oriented companies that listen to their customers and make
the commitment to act on their customers' wishes outperform their self-centered
competitors time and again in profitability and customer loyalty. As a result,
consumers are finding increasing responsiveness in some corners of the
marketplace and are creating a demand for service in others. Indeed, customer
service is emerging as a key competitive advantage today, not only in the
domestic marketplace, but also in the expanding international arena.
In
many industries, service is the product. The service sector accounts for 60
percent of our gross national product and provides some 70 percent of American
jobs. Communications, transportation, utilities, banking, accounting, health
care, and home maintenance are but a few examples of service industries
indispensable to our way of life. Whether the transaction involves goods,
services, or both, quality of customer service is a crucial ingredient in the
interaction between customer and business, before, during, and after the sale.
Service quality is often the factor that distinguishes businesses from one
another.
This
is the 7th year I have proclaimed National Consumers Week. I initiated National
Consumers Week in 1982 to acknowledge and emphasize the significant stake
consumers have in our economy. Our economy has three bases, the triad of
capital, labor, and consumers; without any one of them the whole economy would
lose its balance. Over the past 7 years, I have watched National Consumers Week
grow into an established, national event involving millions of Americans in all
sectors of our economy. I am proud of the success National Consumers Week
enjoys. In recognition of the importance of consumers to our economy, and of
service to consumers and business, ``Consumers Buy Service'' is the theme I have
selected for National Consumers Week, 1988.
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this second day of February, in
the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-eight, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office
of the Federal Register,