nodnirG kraM wrote:EE is very clear on their site that the price may increase over the length of the contract. And by "may" you can assume "will".
It was the way Orange first did it back in 2012 that irked most people: sending a jolly text saying "Hi, your price plan will be increasing from next month..." yes, it genuinely began with "Hi". Particularly sucked for me at the time - not because I was on Orange, but cos I worked for the bastards and had to address the public on their behalf basically to say "yep, the price has gone up; nope, there's nothing you can do about it, suckers".
A high point in my career, certainly.
A surprisingly ballsy move from OFCOM there - stating that if your provider wants to increase your price during the contract then you can exit the contract, during the contractual term, without penalty. Absolutely right, and absolutely the industry's own fault for what they have tried to get away with over the last couple of years.
Whether or not they can, it arguably is not at all in the spirit of reasonable expectation to increase a tarrif during the contractual term. A contract should work in both directions - Orange are guaranteed your custom for a certain period of time, but in turn you are guaranteed a fixed price for that amount of time, it makes negotiations at the start of a contract meaningless if Orange can just knock the price up whenever they want.
Granted, at present it's a percentage based increase and it applies equally to all customers, but if they can get away with that, how long before the increases are based on pound notes and/or can be applied discriminately? It doesn't seem at all beyond the realms of possibility that in the future you could work yourself a deal to get your tarrif for £30 / month, sign the contract on that basis but then a few months down the road Orange could decide the deal you got was too good and arbitrarily increase you to £35 / month, saying it's OK because it's in the contract and any deal you negotiated is irrelevant.
Consumers need protection from this, and it is entirely appropriate that they've got it - I wonder if they'll risk carrying on with their policy of mid-term price increases now?
Oh, and it was also exposed that the clause Orange relied on in their original 2012 price increase WAS dodgy as the increase was justified based on references to an index which ceased to exist in the mid-90's (something they subsequently fixed).