Legal history can help to date shifts in social attitudes, because it shows how,
when, and often also why norms changed. We demonstrate this by examining
when consumer credit became widely accepted in the Netherlands and Belgium,
because general access to credit may serve as a good indicator of the advent of a
consumer society. That shift in attitudes happened in both countries during the
1960s, when legislators came to accept that credit is part and parcel of modern
life for everybody. The consequent equality of consumers before the law then
became more and more fragmented in European regulation, sacrificed to its
leading principle, the idea that well-informed consumers choose rationally and are
therefore responsibly for their choices