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by jcnnghm
6015 days ago
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It's relevant because this amounts to nothing more than another cash grab. There would be no need for ridiculous new taxes like this if it weren't for the incredible mismanagement. And before someone asserts that it isn't a tax, keep in mind that the reason rates are where they are is because companies expect a percentage of the service to never be used. Rates will go up because of this. |
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I agree that companies price these cards expecting to be able to reclaim a certain percentage of the value of these cards. However, they are selling the entire value to the consumer.
So if (and it's a big 'if') the unused minutes are unclaimed property, then gov't escheatment isn't a tax, it's reclaiming lost property on behalf of the consumer. The consumer paid for the entire value of the card, not the value of the card minus a bonus for the issuing company.
Anything left over on a card should be treated as pure bonus to the companies, not a standard revenue source that needs to be recouped. If they do raise rates to recoup lost revenues, then it is the companies performing a cash-grab, not the gov't. This is why companies like gift cards and pre-paid minutes cards... they've been able to extract out the unused value from the cards for years, and it's all "extra" money that they didn't have to earn.