You don't have to make a "down payment" at T-Mobile to get a phone. And you're acting like people don't already know that an iPhone costs $600+ before they buy it. Everyone in the U.S. knows that Apple phones are expensive, nobody flinches, nobodies shocked.
You're not getting it, this is exactly the way it still works. You pick out a phone, they tell you how much you will pay monthly on it, and then they explain that if you terminate your contract, the money owed on the device is due immediately. Nothing has changed.
A flagship phone a T-Mobile is about $20 bucks tacked onto your monthly bill, and they do not charge you interest on the device. You're making this out to be something that it's really not, unfortunately.
The overwhelming majority of Americans are going to continue buying their phones from their carrier, I promise you.
This thread is about ending subsidies in the US. T-Mobile did that over 2 years ago, yet we're just now considering subsidies in the US to be going away. T-Mobile is still a minor player, though they have shaken up the industry somewhat.
The thing is, the number of T-Mobile subscribers is still very much a minority. With the big 2, Verizon and AT&T, many people will be making a down-payment on flagship phones, and they will have to pay the taxes for said phones up front, at least at AT&T. 7% tax on a $600 phone is $42. Some places tax is a bit lower, many places it is much higher. Add that to a $50 down-payment, and then a $20 per month added payment, and people who are in the low-income end of the spectrum (read, most Americans) will think long and hard about getting an iPhone.
People with better credit (read, those with more money to start with) usually don't have to make the down-payment. Those people "usually" can afford the iPhone anyway. It's not going to affect them even if they had to make the down-payment.
Exactly, and this is pretty much how it works on contract, especially after the carriers started prorating the ETF. Even if you wanted to buy a phone outright, for some flagships it was actually cheaper to sign a new 2 year contract, get the subsidized phone, cancel the contract, and pay the EFT, than to buy the phone outright. As long as consumers are going to continue walking into carrier stores, which I'm quite certain they will, they will not save any money this way.
You never save money and never have saved money buying a phone in a carrier store. Most people aren't good with their money. Look at the shape of the economy. Everyone seems to be in debt and can't get out.
I thought the ruse the US carriers were doing, was charging the same monthly service charge (including subsidy), and the same up front cost, for both midrange and high end cost phones? Which is what drove US consumers to the high end, the likes of the iPhone, because it was seen as a better deal?
Exactly.
One point people are missing is that with the contracts of the past, the carriers only listed the "monthly payment" as visible. They never listed the full price, and you had to outright ask or dig deep on the website to find it. It's been a bit more transparent for about the last year, but you still have to ask when you go into the store, at least at AT&T.
With full purchase now going to be one of the preferred options, along with Next, etc., more people are going to see the full price the carriers charge for the first time. Yes, many people already know. What a lot of people don't realize is that the full purchase cost at the carrier is in many cases higher than buying the unlocked version from another dealer.
Carriers are now having to adjust the prices of their phones. I remember looking at a particular smart phone a few years ago, and it when I inquired as to the full-purchase price with no contract at an AT&T store, I was told it was $699. I found the same one manufacturer unlocked, new on Amazon for $499. Such was the case with most all their phones.
Lumia 635 was $99.99 at the AT&T store, and $49 at Walmart. I bought one for $39.99 and one for $35.00, new. AT&T was over-charging.
Now, with the new plans in place, and with all the carriers ditching contracts, I see the the Lumia 640 selling for $79.84 at Walmart, and $79.99 at AT&T. Coincidence? I've never seen AT&T sell the same phone at a matching price before. Why is that? They know with the competition and with full price of phones being so highly visible that they will have to start pricing competitively. I believe with the "contracts hiding the price" by just telling them how much per month they will pay, they felt it was easy to gouge the public, and they were right.
I believe, whether great for Windows Phone or not, it will be great for the consumer, period. I think perhaps this in combination with a number of other factors that Microsoft has been working hard to put into place, the Windows Phone market will begin to improve in the US within about another year or so.