or the poor who have reasonably low priced cell phones?How does that explain how the poor in developing countries stay poor? Or the poor who don't have cell phones?
Wasn't Obama giving poor people free cellphones at one point in order to undermine freedom and democracy? Whatever happened with that? Were those crappy old iPhone 3s or something?
Obviously the price of cell phones isn't why poor people are poor. The general idea of poor getting swindled out of their money by taking advantage of their poverty might be.
However, I'm a bit confused about the ad. What does "90 days same as cash price" mean? And why would they mention the total price after the "worry-free" 6.5 years of payments, as it's almost 3 times the cash price? Who the heck would take that deal except a person who doesn't know math (or has no problem paying for 3 times the normal price for a luxury product, while needing a payment plan to afford it)?
You're wrong about that. Showing me numbers won't do any good to dissuade my view. The reason doesn't lie in the numbers.I would have been better off if I had taken a payday loan.
There is certainly some truth in that. The sad thing is people sometimes delude themselves into thinking the culprit behind a financial downfall stems from the last one, two, or few unfortunates in their lives. We should seldom blame the last straw placed upon a camels back as the true reason for things turning south. People are often a lot closer to the edge than they realize. When things are running smooth and something happens, they might not realize just how close they are to the edge until things start hitting from different angles.It's easy to talk about poor people and their poor financial practices, but it's really a matter of how close you live to the edge. It's always very expensive on the edge.
However, I'm a bit confused about the ad. What does "90 days same as cash price" mean? And why would they mention the total price after the "worry-free" 6.5 years of payments, as it's almost 3 times the cash price? Who the heck would take that deal except a person who doesn't know math (or has no problem paying for 3 times the normal price for a luxury product, while needing a payment plan to afford it)?
That is weekly payments, not monthly.Obviously the price of cell phones isn't why poor people are poor. The general idea of poor getting swindled out of their money by taking advantage of their poverty might be.
However, I'm a bit confused about the ad. What does "90 days same as cash price" mean? And why would they mention the total price after the "worry-free" 6.5 years of payments, as it's almost 3 times the cash price?
The person that doesn't understand math.Who the heck would take that deal except a person who doesn't know math...
Well, there used to be this thing called Layaway, where you'd pay in installments, and once fully paid, you'd get the product.(or has no problem paying for 3 times the normal price for a luxury product, while needing a payment plan to afford it)?
These purchases shouldn't even be remotely legal.However, I'm a bit confused about the ad. What does "90 days same as cash price" mean? And why would they mention the total price after the "worry-free" 6.5 years of payments, as it's almost 3 times the cash price? Who the heck would take that deal except a person who doesn't know math (or has no problem paying for 3 times the normal price for a luxury product, while needing a payment plan to afford it)?
I think they mention the total cost due to consumer protection laws. There was a thread on poverty last year where I posted a WaPo article about a family that was paying a total of $4,500 for a $1,500 sofa/love seat combo. The kicker was that often when they went to pay their bill they came out with another purchase financed with the same "rent-to-own" scheme. The usual suspects were defending this family's poor financial decision-making but it shows that Loren has a good point - these purchases are definitely keeping them in dire financial straits!
There is certainly some truth in that. The sad thing is people sometimes delude themselves into thinking the culprit behind a financial downfall stems from the last one, two, or few unfortunates in their lives. We should seldom blame the last straw placed upon a camels back as the true reason for things turning south. People are often a lot closer to the edge than they realize. When things are running smooth and something happens, they might not realize just how close they are to the edge until things start hitting from different angles.
There is certainly some truth in that. The sad thing is people sometimes delude themselves into thinking the culprit behind a financial downfall stems from the last one, two, or few unfortunates in their lives. We should seldom blame the last straw placed upon a camels back as the true reason for things turning south. People are often a lot closer to the edge than they realize. When things are running smooth and something happens, they might not realize just how close they are to the edge until things start hitting from different angles.
Definitely. Living too close to the edge is at the heart of most financial trouble. It makes people do things like make the payments in the ad.
It's more about priorities. If you can't afford it easily you do not need the newest model cell phone (the ad is for Galaxy 5 but seems to be from when the phone was new judging by the cash price), especially not when the only option to get it is an unfavorable loan.What this is really all about is access to financial services.
No, it is about access to financial services. A person with credit doesn't pay $900 for that phone. In fact, they don't pay for the phone upfront at all. They sign a two yr contract and get to use the phone. Poor guy, if he wants the phone, he is getting suckered into a 100% interest, 18 month long loan. They both will pay the same to actually use the phone.It's more about priorities. If you can't afford it easily you do not need the newest model cell phone (the ad is for Galaxy 5 but seems to be from when the phone was new judging by the cash price), especially not when the only option to get it is an unfavorable loan.What this is really all about is access to financial services.