By Ryan Young on 8.11.08 @ 12:07AM
They ensure we have the best cell phones money can't buy.
Cell phones have really come into their own in the last few
years. Even relatively Spartan phones can now take pictures, send
text messages, and ease the pain of commuting with a game of
Brickbreaker. These technological marvels can even send and receive
telephone calls.
It gets better. Smart phones, such as BlackBerries and Treos,
can browse the Internet, send email, juggle your schedule, and even
warn of upcoming traffic jams with Google Maps. Apple's iPhone adds
a sense of style to the mix. Every year new features come out that
make people's lives easier.
They're affordable, too. There are now more than 3.3 billion
cell phones in use around the world.
That's amazing. But what would it take for all this progress to
come screeching to a halt? Alameda County Superior Court Judge
Bonnie Sabraw has one answer: abolish early termination fees.
Consumers and consumer advocates alike have hailed her recent
decision, which declares the fees to be in violation of California
state law. Sprint now has to pay $73 million to former
customers.
Of course, Judge Sabraw's precedent could have unintended
consequences. They would not be pretty.
BUT FIRST, what are early termination fees, anyway? And why do
people hate them so much?
People probably hate early termination fees for the simple fact
that they are fees. Perfectly understandable. Less forgivable is
the tendency for many people to not read the contracts they sign.
Some people get a rude surprise when they switch carriers before
their contract is up.
Early termination fees must accomplish something for
companies to continue to wield them in the face of widespread
public resentment -- not to mention judges pretending to be
legislators.
As it turns out, early termination fees help more people afford
better phones. They are a democratizer of technology. They also
give phone companies more incentive to innovate and add new
features.
It works like this: phones are expensive. They can cost several
hundred dollars. A lot of people can't afford that kind of upfront
cost. But spreading that cost out over time can help people of
limited means afford quality phones, just as mortgages make home
ownership possible for people who don't happen to have $200,000
lying around.
Service providers will typically sell their phones at a loss,
then make their money back by charging more for monthly service.
It's a little bit like Gillette's famous strategy of selling razors
cheaply and making their money back on the blades.
Since it takes time for phone companies to recoup their initial
losses, they'll often require customers to commit to, say, two
years of service.
Customers can opt out early if they like. But they'll have to
pay an early termination fee to do it, which can be upwards of
$200. That's pretty steep. But it does make sure that customers pay
back the subsidy they received for their cheap phones, one way or
another.
Put another way, early termination fees reduce risk. As long as
the risk is low, service providers will continue to make their
products as affordable as they can. That's good for business and
consumers alike.
STILL, CRITICS allege that early termination fees are
anti-competitive, because they make it harder to switch carriers.
That ignores the intense competitive effects that the fees have on
innovation.
When something is cheap, people buy more of it. By making the
upfront cost of phones as inexpensive as possible, early
termination fees vastly increase sales.
That's why companies are racing furiously against each other to
come out with new and better phones. A new widget that your
competitor doesn't have can bring in millions of dollars of new
contracts.
If early termination fees reduce competition in the cell phone
marketplace, then why is there so much of it?
Don't expect to see an answer in Judge Sabraw's next
verdict.
The next time someone grumbles about early termination fees,
tell them what the fees do to make phones affordable and to ensure
a competitive, innovative marketplace. And remind them to read that
contract before signing it.
topics:
Business, Law