Jump to content

Recommended Posts

EE has just put my bill up by 3.1% quoting this as the rate of inflation. I've told them as a business their prices depend on competitive factors (which should bring prices down), profitability, USPs etc. It's probably down in my t&C that they can use the RPI on a certain month. Interesting that they have picked the highest rate of inflation for about two decades,


So RPI has long been ditched by government as a measure of inflation. Many were up in arms as pensions etc are based on the lower CPI, and there were no doubt accusations that the government were no longer using the true inflation rate!


I wont win any battle with EE and of course can add to the competitive pressures on them by moving contract.


Good to hear from those on the know, rather than "I am a sad person with no friends". I don;t need the forum to tell me this, I know already!

This is a double swindle if it includes the cost of a phone in your monthly charge too as they'd pay for the phone at the beginning of the contract so why should that part be subject to RPI - i moaned to them too. I have noticed this charge is now more prominent if you look at a quote nowadays rather than hidden in their T&Cs so others must have complained too.

RPI is 3.1% for Mar 2017


About halfway down this link https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices#timeseries


Sept 2.0

Oct 2.0

Nov 2.2

Dec 2.3

Jan 2.6

Feb 3.2

Mar 3.1


My rent component of my shared ownership goes up by RPI in Sept - so I can expect 2.0% increase very soon.


and heres RPI forever (or back to the war) https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/inflationandpriceindices/timeseries/czbh/mm23

I think it's standard practice amongst phone operators these days; Vodafone did it to me a few months back.


You should get the best deal by switching every year using a comparison site e.g. https://www.mobilephonechecker.co.uk/sim-only


I've been with each operator about four times each since 2000. Easy to find unlimited minutes, texts and at least 4GB of data for less than ?10 a month.

Lowlander Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I think it's standard practice amongst phone

> operators these days; Vodafone did it to me a few

> months back.

>

> You should get the best deal by switching every

> year using a comparison site e.g.

> https://www.mobilephonechecker.co.uk/sim-only

>

> I've been with each operator about four times each

> since 2000. Easy to find unlimited minutes, texts

> and at least 4GB of data for less than ?10 a

> month.


SIM only is reasonable but obviously you either keep your

old phone or buy from the manufacturer (?500 - ?700 for the

top phones).


Edit: and most of us seem to be on 2 year contracts - mine

ends April 30th.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • You are a nasty person onIine your posts are anti british and infIamatary if you dont Iike the United Kindon and aII the other haters Iet us no maybe we can do a gofundme ffor you and you can go eIse where and take the anTi Brits with you how about you come n  have a game of chess i couId expIain to you then 
    • Does anybody have a pasting table they no longer have a use for?  
    • I know, but I was interested to see his reply. Though that will probably be incomprehensible as well. 
    • The hospice shop takes items as "rags" which are in too poor condition to sell, so I presume if they find clothes they can't sell amongst donations, these are also treated as rags? I presume they go  somewhere to be recycled in some way? 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...