Apple's not giving you a charger with your new phone has nothing to do with 'caring' about the planet but rather about their profits.
When TF International analyst Ming-Chi Kuo told clients in June 2020 that the iPhone 12 series would not include a charger or EarPods inside the box, consumers were stunned. Sure, Apple
tried to hide behind the goal of being environmentally friendly and
pointed out that by reducing the size of the boxes that the iPhone comes
in, 70% more devices could fit on a shipping pallet.
Removing the charger and EarPods from the iPhone box allowed 70% more devices to fit on a pallet
More
boxes on a pallet would allow Apple to ship more phones to users at one
time. As a result, using smaller boxes would allow Apple to reduce
yearly carbon emissions by 2 million metric tons, the company said. That
is equivalent to taking 500,000 cars off the road.
But not everyone believes that Apple made this move,
which was copied by most major phone manufacturers including Samsung and
Google, to help the environment. While many will agree that Apple is
removing the charger from iPhone boxes for a "green" reason, the "green"
they are thinking about is the color of money.
The
astute observer will note that Apple started this program with the
release of its first 5G iPhone series, the iPhone 12. Could Apple have
decided to make up for the extra costs of including a 5G modem and other
parts by taking the power brick and the EarPods out of the box?
According to the Daily Mail,
by eliminating the charger and the EarPods from the box, Apple has
saved a total of £5 billion thus far. That is equivalent to $6.5
billion. But Apple did not reduce the price of its handsets when it
removed the accessories from the iPhone box. At the same time, many
iPhone buyers who wanted to fast charge their iPhones only had the 5W
adapters that came in the box with older models and were forced to spend
$19 for a 20W charger and another $19 to replace the EarPods.
Of
course, we might be selling Apple short here. After all, some iPhone
buyers might have decided to replace the EarPods, which were free out of
the box until Apple removed them, with a pair of AirPods which are
currently offered at $129 and up.
If a
consumer just wanted to replace the EarPods, that could be arranged for
an additional $19. So even if an Apple customer just wanted to add a
charging brick and the wired EarPods with his new iPhone, that would
cost him an additional $38. When you consider the millions of iPhone
units Apple sells each year, this certainly runs into plenty of money
flowing into Apple's coffers.
Reducing the
size of the box and allowing 70% more devices on each pallet should
help Apple reduce its shipping costs by 40% which in turn should allow
the company to reduce the price of the phone to consumers. Some analysts
have computed that Apple is saving the equivalent of $35 on each iPhone
it sells. Yet, there has been no cost reduction from the firm.
Since
it announced that it was removing the charger and EarPods from the
iPhone box, Apple is believed to have shipped 190 million iPhone units.
Totaling up the amount of money that Apple has saved from this
cost-cutting move and adding the amount of money it saved on shipping
comes to the £5 billion (or $6.5 billion) that the Daily Mail computed. In other words, had Apple passed every penny of savings to its customers, the public could be $6.5 billion richer.
But
okay, let's say Apple could keep half the amount it saved. That would
still have resulted in the public saving $3.25 billion. And we're not
even including the amount of money that the public spent on buying a new
charger because they didn't have one, or more likely, wanted one that
charged at a speed faster than 5W.
And we're not even including the $293.4 million bucks that the Daily Mail
says that Apple customers spent on accessories since the company got
stingy about what it puts in the box along with the iPhone.
So
let's look at it this way. Apple saved money on shipping and by not
having to purchase the charging brick and EarPods that used to go in the
box. The public not only didn't save any money, but it also had to
shell out to replace the accessories they wanted that they no longer
received for "free."
This $6.5 billion goes
straight to the bottom line increasing Apple's profits and pushing up
the price of Apple's stock. In turn, executives like Tim Cook benefit to
the tune of millions of dollars while the public pays to replace the
missing accessories. Nice work if you can get it.
Source: phonearena.com
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