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U.S. government tries to rein in an out-of-control subscription economy

11 Comments
By David Arditi

Signing up for a subscription to a streaming service or newspaper has never been easier.

Canceling it, on the other hand, can be a cumbersome journey involving phone calls, letters or finding the option to cancel buried in a remote menu on an app.

And that’s if you remember to cancel in the first place.

Now, thanks to a new rule passed by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, you may have an easier time getting rid of subscriptions you no longer want.

The rule aims to make canceling a subscription as easy as setting one up. The Federal Trade Commission refers to it as “click-to-cancel” under the logic that one click should be able to cancel a subscription.

It will go into effect on April 14, 2025.

The move updates a 1973 regulation called the “Negative Option Rule,” which governed subscription services for products like magazines or book-of-the-month clubs — physical items sent over and over. The phrase “negative option” refers to the fact that a subscriber, under the rules of the service, doesn’t need to do anything to remain subscribed; if a customer fails to cancel a subscription, a company can charge customers for another year. Silence is acceptance.

The 1973 rule only regulated “prenotification” subscriptions, in which a service would send subscribers a product and, if no action were taken, the customer was responsible for paying for it – a model that Columbia Records used for its Columbia House Record Club, which would periodically send music to subscribers and charge them for it if they didn’t return it.

The new rule requires companies that sign up customers online to allow customers to cancel online. Some companies have been forcing customers who had signed up online to cancel over the phone or in person. Under the click-to-cancel rule, companies will no longer be able to force customers to cancel in a different manner.

But I do wonder if this rule is merely a Band-Aid on a broken leg, particularly since more and more companies are starting to see value in making sure customers get locked into regular payments – and, in some cases, never fully own what they buy.

Unending consumption

According to the 2021 Subscription Economy Index, the subscription economy had grown by 437% since 2012. And as subscriptions mount, it can be difficult to remember them all, particularly since they usually operate through automatic payments.

Subscriptions services include mainstays like newspapers and magazines. But now there are razor blade, video game, software and meal subscriptions. BMW even briefly required subscriptions in some countries to use features in their cars, such as heated seats, before backing down amid an outcry.

It’s all part of a broader shift toward what, in my book on streaming, I call “unending consumption”: a business model based on the buyer’s constant consumption.

It’s constant because consumers pay a recurring charge on autopay. It’s consistent because the price is relatively stable.

Companies favor inertia over churn

You can see why this business model has companies salivating.

Most businesses have what’s known as a “high churn rate.” In other words, a high percentage of their customers only buy from them once or twice before stopping.

Subscriptions, on the other hand, give companies a stream of revenue. In business, this is called “inertia,” because once someone subscribes to a service, they tend to continue subscribing.

Before digital streaming, the average music fan spent roughly $45 per year, adjusted for inflation, on CDs, tapes and records. A Spotify subscription costs $120 per year. And what happens if you pay for Spotify, but don’t use it much during a given month? Spotify receives that $10 as surplus value.

It’s not just media companies turning to subscriptions. In the electric vehicle industry, owners increasingly need subscriptions to access certain features in their cars. For instance, Tesla requires a subscription to extend a vehicle’s battery range and use self-driving features.

Technology and society scholars MC Forelle and Aaron Shapiro have coined the term “subscriptionization” to describe how personal vehicles are being transformed into “assets that generate rents for automakers.”

Take the short-lived BMW heated seats subscription. When customers purchased their new car, their seats had the heating capability. But they needed to subscribe to a service in order for them to work: Owners could pay $18 per month, $180 per year or $415 over a vehicle’s lifetime to use it.

It’s easy to see how BMW benefits: Drivers probably only need the heated seats during the coldest months of the year. But how many will forget to cancel? This helps the automaker draw consistent income from the subscription even in warm months.

Free trials and hidden price hikes

This isn’t to say that subscriptions can’t be convenient. Paying for TV programs every time you want to stream a show would be tiresome. And purchasing a newspaper on your way to work means not being able to read it before you leave home.

However, I can’t help but see a connection between the rise in subscription-based business models and ballooning personal debt in the U.S.

Wages have stagnated for decades, beginning in the 1970s. But Americans keep paying for more subscription-based services, many of which are no longer seen as luxuries, but necessities: internet access, cell phones, Amazon Prime, Netflix, Spotify, Microsoft 365, cloud storage, and on and on. In fact, according to one poll, more than half of subscribers underestimate how much they spend on subscriptions each month, driven by a considerable amount of people who forget about their subscriptions altogether.

Click-to-cancel promises to help people manage their array of subscription services. But in my view, this fails to address a number of unfair subscription practices.

Giving people a free trial is a strategy businesses use because they know many customers will forget to cancel before the trial period ends – regardless of whether they use the service. The government could remedy this by outlawing having to enter credit card information before the purchase.

People can also end up overpaying through subscriptions that go up in cost without alerting the customers. Amazon’s “Subscribe and Save,” for example, allows prices for subscribed goods to increase, and the company won’t notify the subscriber.

According to one poll, 69% of Americans think there are already too many subscription services available. But companies are nonetheless scrambling to develop their own, whether it’s movie studios like Paramount rolling out their own subscription-based streaming services or Hewlett-Packard offering subscriptions for printer ink. Even the most popular app to manage subscriptions, Rocket Money, requires a subscription.

While click-to-cancel will make it easier to get out of byzantine subscription plans, a subscription-based economy seems poised to expand – along with all of the attendant traps to suck consumers in.

David Arditi is professor of Sociology, University of Texas at Arlington.

The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

© The Conversation

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

11 Comments
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Good. Glad to hear some action is finally being taken.

But people should also take responsibility and dump these worthless services.

7 ( +7 / -0 )

There's a huge gym chain in US, LA Fitness I believe, that signing up is as easy as inputting your name, password and credit card info on their website. Canceling the subscription on the other side, you'd need to personally go to the post office and get a certified letter stating your address and other personal info. Then sent by post and only after the following month of the date of sending that letter, you'd get to cancel the subscription. And even then, they might charge your card just because.

Yesterday I was watching this video about how much subscriptions are ruining our lives. It's so bad that even Hewlett Packard can remotely disable your printer and ink cartridges if you were to cancel a "subscription" to the printer you bought. It's savage.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zptP3GiaulE

3 ( +3 / -0 )

hey, making it impossible to cancel is a feature to improve customer service.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Internet and cell phone service are absolutely necessary for me. I am satisfied with a low-cost phone that is used for nothing but phone calls. Internet is far too expensive. Adding other subscriptions to use with internet is a slap in the face.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

I don't have a single subscription.

3 ( +4 / -1 )

It's so bad that even Hewlett Packard can remotely disable your printer and ink cartridges if you were to cancel a "subscription" to the printer you bought.

That is incorrect. When one cancels their HP Instant Ink subscription, what it does is it cancels the special HP cartridges that the subscription sends you in the mail. That means you can't use those special cartridges anymore.

Your HP printer, however, is not disabled. You can still use it, but you do need another set of cartridges. So all you need to do is buy those in a store, then just keep using your printer.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

I always find out how to cancel a subscription before I activate one, and often I cancel the subscription minutes after activation, because I only want it for one month but most do not offer them with anything but ongoing.

Like WoW, when I want to play I do a months payment and cancel immediately, giving me one months play. Then I dont play again for a few more years and do the same again.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

A decade ago I paid to get registered versions of many PC applications. But sine they all went to subscriptions I no longer pay for apps.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Easy to sign up hard to sign out!

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Subscription is just part of the non-ownership that those above what for everyone. No thanks. There is a reason why before you got an "owner's manual," but now you get a "user's manual."

0 ( +0 / -0 )

Subscriptions are a bad idea for those paying them. Particularly for software.

I think the stats are something like 20% of gym members use them regularly, and as many as two-thirds of members use them hardly ever or just once.

Surprisingly, they can be bad for the companies selling them too. Netflix have a fixed amount of money coming in, so they have a fixed amount to spend on new content. If that content is poorly received, subscribers may drop the service. But they won't necessarily join up for one good movie or TV series. A massive hit that might have pulled in tonnes of cash at cinemas and sold a huge number of DVDs worldwide, may not earn them any extra cash. Plus they are on the hamster wheel for producing endless content.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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