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==Safety regulations== {{main|Toy safety}} [[File:LEGO-01.jpg|thumb|left|Toys with small parts, such as these [[Lego]] elements are required by law in some countries to have warnings about choking hazards.]] Many countries have passed [[safety standards]] limiting the types of toys that can be sold. Most of these seek to limit potential hazards, such as [[choking]] or [[fire hazard]]s that could cause injury. Children, especially very young ones, often put toys into their mouths, so the materials used to make a toy are regulated to prevent poisoning. Materials are also regulated to prevent fire hazards. Young children cannot judge what is safe and what is dangerous, and parents do not always think of all possible situations, so such warnings and regulations are important on toys.{{Citation needed|date=May 2022}} Every country has its own regulations on toy safety, but since the [[globalization]] and opening of markets, most of them try to harmonize their regulations. The most common danger for younger children is to put toys in their mouths. This is why chemicals contained in paint and other components of children's products are carefully regulated.<!--<ref>[http://newsletter.sgs.com/eNewsletterPro/uploadedimages/000006/sgs-safeguards-02812-korea-plans-to-limit-five-chemicals-in-childrens-products-a4-en-12.pdf "Korea plans to limit five chemicals in children's products"], SGS SafeGuards. Retrieved 02/2012</ref> --> Countries or trade zones such as the [[European Union]] regularly publish lists to regulate the quantities or ban chemicals from toys and juvenile products. The globalization of toys has had negative effects on locally produced toys in various countries, pushing out traditional ways of play<ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite book |author1=Oktaviani, R.C. |author2=Ichwan, F.N. |author1-link=Imported Toys in Indonesia: Parental Consumer Literacy, Purchasing Decisions, and Globalization |editor1-last=Hains |editor1-first=Rebecca C. |editor2-last=Jennings |editor2-first=Nancy A. |title=The Marketing of Children's Toys |date=2021 |publisher=Palgrave}}</ref> and presenting new risks to children in areas where parental [[literacy]] levels make it hard for parents to understand the risks and age-appropriateness of various imported toys.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> There have also been issues of toy safety regarding [[lead paint]]. Some toy factories, when projects become too large for them to handle, outsource production to other less known factories, often in other countries. Recently,{{When|date=May 2022}} there were some in China that America had to send back. The subcontractors may not be watched as closely and sometimes use improper manufacturing methods. The U.S. government, along with mass market stores, is now moving towards requiring companies to submit their products to testing before they end up on shelves.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/11/business/worldbusiness/11lead.html | work=The New York Times | title=Why Lead in Toy Paint? It's Cheaper | first=David | last=Barboza | date=11 September 2007 | access-date=28 March 2010}}</ref>
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