Look this gift horse in the mouth
Gift cards seem like no-brainers, but why not just give cash?
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Report warns of gift card ripoffs Nov. 13: MSNBC's Chris Jansing talks with Consumer Report's Greg Daugherty about the magazine's article that said $8 billion worth of gift cards went unused last year. MSNBC |
“We’ve gotten a lot of complaints from readers recently about them, and it’s clear that an enormous amount of money is going to waste here,” says Greg Daugherty, the magazine’s executive editor.
Consumer Reports says about $8 billion — or about 10 percent — worth of gift cards given during the 2006 holiday season still have not been redeemed. Some cards were lost, others are forgotten. It seems like we all have a few. “I have them around my house in various places,” Daugherty tells me.
He’s not alone. The magazine surveyed gift card recipients and found that 27 percent of them have not used one or more of the cards they received last year. Why not?
- 58 percent said they didn’t have time
- 35 percent said they couldn’t find anything they wanted to buy
- 32 percent said they forgot about the card
- 4 percent said they tried to redeem the cards too late — they had expired
- 3 percent said the cards were lost
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To launch its gift card campaign, Consumer Reports bought a full-page advertisement in Tuesday’s New York Times. The ad called unused cards “easy money” for retailers.
“That couldn’t be further from the truth,” says Ellen Davis of the National Retail Federation. “Unredeemed gift cards are hardly easy money.”
Davis says merchants want people to spend their gift cards as quickly as possible because gift cards do not count as a sale until they are redeemed. “So if you buy a gift card this holiday season and the recipient doesn’t spend it until 2009, a retailer is not going to be able to put that gift card on their books until 2009,” she says.
Retailers also hope that when you come in with that gift card you’ll spend more than the value of the card. Consumer Reports calls that another downside to giving gift cards.
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In most states, if a gift card is not used within a few years it is considered unclaimed property, and the retailer must give that money to the state. “It’s not leftover money that most retailers can put in their pocket,” says Davis.
Consumer Reports sees it differently. The retailer can take advantage of the float – investing the money spent on the gift card until it’s used to buy something. “It’s not a good thing for consumers regardless of where the money happens to be on the accounting ledger,” says Daugherty. “It’s a winning proposition for stores all around, but not for consumers.”
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