PR Until now, you have enviously squinted beyond the borders and marveled at the injustice of the world, because our neighbors can buy this or that for a few bucks, and in our country the prices seem a little excessive to you? Our comparison might blow your mind. It's not that hot.
We found out how much the new addition to the Apple family costs in individual countries of the world and compared the results with the local average salary and price for 1 GB of data. Without them, you can only display the iPhone 7 on a shelf at home. Result? The lowest purchase price does not always mean a win. For example, in the US they could narrate. Compared to us, they save money on the popular phone with the bitten apple logo 5 crowns, but they will pay on average 8x more for data in order to fully use the mobile masterpiece.
Canadians have the same problem. You for 1 GB will pay even CZK 890 and their average wage is a full 82 CZK per hour lower than in the USA. That's almost heaven calling. Even if we add to that, data tariffs not valid nationwide. For example, if you go to a different province than the one you are in rate have arranged, it may happen that you will not be able to use the already paid data in the future.
On the other hand, those who can whistle are The Swiss. With their enviable average wage of around a thousand per hour, CZK 454 for 1 GB of data is not going to rip them off at all. In addition, you can get Steve Jobs' brilliant mobile device from them the cheapest in all of Europe. What about us, you ask? We hold the bass with Italy, Sweden, Norway and Denmark and sell iPhone 7 around 21 thousand. Which sounds pretty good until you compare it to the average salary. Then it's not so fanfare anymore.
You are interested in, why do prices in individual countries for gigabytes and goods are so drastically different? Experts say it's the market. Everyone is different as is the economy of the state. In the case of gigabytes, the fact that their cost price cannot be determined in advance, not even with a crystal ball, plays a big role. Only infrastructure prices are taken into account and the rest is a bit of alchemy. You just mix and pray it makes money. As a rule, operators charge what the market allows.
But we know some tricks to improve yourself at least a little catch data at cheaper prices. For example, bet on mobile internet price comparison. Comparators usually have almost the entire market under their thumb, so you can easily find the best deal. Plus, in exchange for your phone number and a few minutes on the line with a call center operator, you can get some pampering an undercounter that the operator would not normally offer you. It's simple, just fill it out mobile internet calculator.
Family tariffs, company tariffs and the possibility to combine, for example, television with internet to tablet and mobile, and thus pay less. These are probably the best currently available solutions. For those who want to get dirty on an electronic toy from Apple, there is an opportunity to combine the pleasant with the useful, plan a vacation in Switzerland or England, for example and buy it there for cheaper money.
And Hungarians have 1GB for 1/4 of what we have ;-)
I mainly don't understand why it just works somewhere and not somewhere... Why is it OK in Slovakia, for example?
I don't know who wrote this article, but it doesn't seem to me that I wouldn't pay for data in the US, for $30 I had 2 minutes, 50 sms and 70GB of data. The annual salary of a normal working American is $600-700 thousand, the average salary of a Slovak is €30-500 per month, of course the salaries are gross, but for €XNUMX pausal I get unlimited calls, no sms and XNUMXMB of data.
You can see other pauses at http://cellphoneplans.androidauthority.com/CellPhones
I have 360 GB of data, 35 hours of worldwide calls and unlimited text messages in Denmark for around CZK 10. Unbound.
So I don't like it very much either. We fly to the states regularly, the last time we were there was in the summer. We topped up an AT&T prepaid card for $50, activated an unlimited plan for a month, and for this amount we had unlimited calls and texts throughout the US, and 20GB of fast internet. We used navigation, e-mails, youtube and apple music there for the whole month. Absolutely no problems, we ran out of data on the penultimate day and that only slowed down the connection. At the rate of 24,5 CZK per dollar = 1225 CZK. Again, it doesn't seem so bad to me, considering what the average salary is in California, where we were staying.
You are dealing with it here completely unnecessarily, because this is a PR article, i.e. zero informative value, it is only trying to interest you in something and focus on something. Do not expect true and straightforward information here.
This is PR right here. I'm affected, I just don't know what. I'm going to buy something right now, but I don't know what. If there is no zero value, write your contribution
But he's right. I marked the article above as PR.
Well, you're probably the only one who didn't understand that this is PR for the usetreno.cz website and they want to get you on their site with the price comparison tool.e