
Image courtesy of Digital TrendsBy AJ Dellinger
According
to a recent study, Americans pay three times as much for their LTE
network service than most Europeans -- and nearly ten times more than
what Swedish citizens pay.
We can now add 4G LTE service to the list of things Americans pay significantly more to have than the rest of the world — right next to education and health care. According to a GSM Association study reported by the New York Times, Americans pay three times more per gigabyte of data than the average European consumers — and ten times more than Sweden. But at least we can get a large pizza for just $5, right America?
The study revealed that America's leading LTE provider, Verizon Wireless, charges its subscribers $7.50 for every gigabyte of data downloaded over its network. In comparison, the average cost of a gig in Europe is $2.50. Sweden leads the way in inexpensive service, with data only ringing up at $0.63 per gigabyte.
Verizon spokeswomen Brenda Raney did counter
this information by pointing out the Verizon plan that is being
compared is from its Share Everything plan, which includes unlimited
call and text minutes and allows data to be shared among ten devices.
If
a person was to purchase a data only plan, similar to how the European
providers offer service, they would only pay over twice the European
average with a cost of $5.50 per gigabyte. Of course, Europeans
separate talk and data plans, though. Verizon, on the other hand, is
forcing all new users to sign up for Share Everything plans. And though
you can connect up to 10 devices to an account, there is a monthly fee
per device, which ranges from $10 to $40.
Verizon was the first company to roll out 4G
LTE in the United States, followed by AT&T. Verizon still owns the
market with 11.6 million LTE subscribers (AT&T reports just short
of a million), or about 43 percent of the world's 27 million LTE users.
The lone
country to beat Verizon to market just happens to be the cheapest:
Sweden. The cost gap seems to have everything to do with competition,
though. Europe has 38 of the world's 88 LTE providers fighting for
subscribers. Austria and Finland have three within their borders alone.
Meanwhile, the world's largest market for mobile, the United States,
is still playing catch up in this regard.
This has actually been a trend with phone
service in the United States. The average cost of a 3G contract runs an
American citizen $115 a month. In comparison, citizens of the
Netherlands pay $51 and those in Britain pay $59. The higher costs keep
the adoption rate at a slow climb, which in turn keeps the cost up on
those that have jumped on board because the provider has to recoup
costs from building the network.
It's a self-perpetuating cycle that is very American: Pay more, consume more, and get less.
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This article was originally posted on Digital Trends
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