Hulu just jacked up its price by $10 a month, although many of its customers are families who switched to the streaming service in order to cut the cord from high-priced cable TV companies. Other popular video-on-demand services like
The timing of the price increases couldn't be worse for millions of Americans out of work, stuck at home and struggling to keep up with bills. But big media companies put the blame on the ever-rising cost of programming — most notably for broadcast TV and sports, which are the biggest factors driving the constant price hikes that get passed down to consumers.
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"It's always more than inflation. They do it every January, and there's absolutely nothing we can do to stop this," said
Price hikes for cable TV and internet service have practically become an annual tradition over the past two decades — about as certain as death and taxes.
The annual rate increase is part of an ongoing debate over competition and regulation in the cable/broadband business, and there will likely be more efforts to revisit the issue in the near future.
'What is becoming every household's biggest utility bill'
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Households are paying through the nose in order to watch their favorite TV shows, and a recent report by DecisionData.org illustrates it with a sobering conclusion.
Using publicly available data from municipal utility providers and other sources, the home services comparison website found that the average household cable bill of $217 a month exceeds what families spend on most other utilities combined.
Cable bills stay relatively similar across household sizes, whether it's one person living in a small apartment or a family of 10 living in a large house.
"It's normal for the average consumer to look for ways to save money on things like their electric or water bills through conservation efforts," the report said. "But what we still don't hear discussed more frequently is how to cut costs on what is becoming every household's biggest utility bill.
"It's not as if cable is optional anymore, with having internet access at home being almost as important as electricity at this point."
But who's responsible for the out-of-control costs?
Cable companies point to rising fees they pay to carry TV networks. Networks like
The big media companies that own the TV networks — like
"The only increase will be what the content providers demand," he said. "But there won't be any increase for anything we can control as far as our equipment and service."
"Now people have dozens of choices that replicate what you used to get from a cable company and deliver it through the internet,"
That doesn't mean it's easy. "Consumers have a lot of choice, but it can take a lot of work from them to put together a plan similar to what they used to get with a traditional paid TV cable package," he said.
"Internet hikes are something we can't control because there's not a lot of choice among providers," he said.
'Competition or regulation. Today we have neither of them.'
From
"Consumers have only two possibilities for defending themselves against rate increases,"
He said it's important to stress that all cable companies deliver broadband, and more than half their income comes from broadband, which is astronomically profitable. Prices should be coming down, not going up.
He said cable companies are earning 80% before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. The average for
"That's an enormously profitable service,"
His organization is gearing up for another showdown on the issue.
"No doubt there will be a fierce debate among policymakers about how to fix it," he said. "It will happen at the next
Change might be coming
And as cable costs climb, it's become more difficult to know how much the bill will actually be until it arrives because the advertised price hardly ever includes the laundry list of add-on fees that inflate the total price.
Change, at least on that last point, might be coming.
A law passed in 2019 — which went into effect this month — will usher in a new day for the telecom industry.
The Television Viewers Protection Act requires cable TV service providers to give customers an itemized breakdown of the extra fees and charges, as well as a good faith estimate of the taxes that will be collected by the cable provider.
New customers will be able to cancel a cable contract within 24 hours, without any charge, under the act.
At a time when internet access is the key to having access to jobs, health care and education, no one can afford to be disconnected.
There is some relief for people who can't pay their cable, phone or internet bills. The program offered through the
The federal program helps ensure that low-income consumers can afford 21st-century broadband and stay connected to communications technology.
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