A new financial and public health crisis is brewing in Britain, but this time the balance sheet is measured in youthful faces rather than pounds and pence. The phenomenon, dubbed 'cosmeticorexia' by medical professionals, sees a growing number of pre-teen and teenage girls spending heavily on anti-ageing skincare products and cosmetic procedures. This trend, fuelled by social media influencers and a multi-billion-pound beauty industry, has prompted British health officials to launch a crackdown on the toxic 'perfect skin' narrative.
From the perspective of a City veteran, this is a textbook case of irrational market behaviour. These young consumers are buying into a high-risk asset: the promise of eternal youth. The returns are illusory, the costs are upfront and compounding. The Bank of Mum and Dad is effectively underwriting a bubble in retinol creams and Botox injections for children whose skin is still in its natural growth phase. The yield on this investment is negative.
Let's look at the numbers. A typical 'starter' anti-ageing regime for a 12-year-old can easily set back parents £200 a month. That's £2,400 annually, invested in a product that will be worthless in a decade. If that same sum were placed in a low-cost index tracker, it would be worth £3,500 after 10 years, assuming a 5% real return. Instead, it's being poured into a black hole of dermatological speculation.
The health implications are equally concerning. Young skin, with its lower oil production and thinner barrier, is being assaulted with potent acids and retinoids meant for weathered, middle-aged complexions. The result? Dermatologists report a surge in contact dermatitis, chemical burns, and premature skin damage. In other words, the cure is causing the disease. This is the equivalent of a central bank hiking rates to fight inflation and triggering a recession.
The government's response has been characteristically interventionist. The Department of Health and Social Care has announced a task force to regulate online marketing of skincare products to minors. The Advertising Standards Authority is reviewing guidelines to ban influencers from promoting 'anti-ageing' products to under-16s. This is the editorial hand of the state, trying to correct a market failure. But will it work?
Previous attempts to legislate against fads in the beauty sector have had mixed results. The ban on advertising cosmetic surgery to under-18s in 2014 largely pushed the market underground or onto unregulated platforms. The likely outcome here is that the crackdown will dampen legitimate advertising but do little to stem the flow of unboxing videos and TikTok tutorials. The demand is simply too elastic.
The root cause is a cultural obsession with youth that defies economic logic. In a low-growth, high-inflation environment, one might expect a premium on tangible assets. Instead, we see a flight into the intangible currency of Instagram likes. This is the ultimate speculative bubble: beauty as an asset class. And like all bubbles, it will eventually pop, leaving behind a trail of distressed assets and empty wallets.
For parents, the advice is simple: enforce capital controls. Monitor your child's spending, educate them on the time value of money, and redirect their beauty budget into a Junior ISA. The only anti-ageing strategy that pays dividends is financial literacy. The rest is just a tax on insecurity.








