Home FEATURED NEWS You know who’s really going local? Not RWA uncles, but Indian millennials

You know who’s really going local? Not RWA uncles, but Indian millennials

0
You know who’s really going local? Not RWA uncles, but Indian millennials

[ad_1]

Soham Sen | ThePrint


Text Size:

You may hate our snobbish avocado toasts, and our obsession with Insta-worthy cafes. You may absolutely despise the way we hop from one job to another without an ounce of regret or the sentiment of loyalty. But you can’t hate the way we have navigated our shopping habits — they are in complete sync with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ambitious Aatmanirbhar Bharat plan.

While ‘boomers’ were throwing Chinese TV sets (that might have been Japanese or Korean) out of their windows to prove their nationalism after the India-China standoff, the average urban millennial consumer was busy finding environment-friendly and sustainable products to satiate her/his immediate needs, and at the same time helping boost local businesses much before you came to know that shopping locally was in national interest.

What you might deem elitist or spoilt behaviour is actually helping local and organic businesses grow. Take for instance Kombucha, a fizzy and fermented drink with 0.5 per cent alcohol content, the craze for which among the Indian consumer is helping local businesses flourish

Our penchant for trying exotic produce and exploring different cultures also helps local businesses prosper.

Several urban millennials I know bought local, Instagram-advertised products in the last few months that we have been working from home. Be it Greater Than Gin from Goa, sustainably sourced Black Baza Coffee from Karnataka or turmeric from Meghalaya. Yes, it costs more and most of the time is a luxury product, but millennials anyway haven’t been buying cars or homes, as Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman once pointed out.

An average urban millennial didn’t need a catchy appeal by the Prime Minister in order to buy local and at the same time stay global. This has been an ethos that the privileged in this generation have largely shared for a while.


Also read: These are the things Indians have been spending their money on during the pandemic

We are deeply grateful to our readers & viewers for their time, trust and subscriptions.

Quality journalism is expensive and needs readers to pay for it. Your support will define our work and ThePrint’s future.

SUBSCRIBE NOW