The average American now holds onto their smartphone for 29 months, according to a recent survey by Reviews.org, and that cycle is getting longer. The average was around 22 months in 2016.
While squeezing as much life out of your device as possible may save money in the short run, especially amid widespread fears about the strength of the consumer and job market, it might cost the economy in the long run, especially when device hoarding occurs at the level of corporations.
Research released by the Federal Reserve last month concludes that each additional year companies delay upgrading equipment results in a productivity decline of about one-third of a percent, with investment patterns accounting for approximately 55% of productivity gaps between advanced economies. The good news: businesses in the U.S. are generally quicker to reinvest in replacing aging equipment. The Federal Reserve report shows that if European productivity had matched U.S. investment patterns starting in 2000, the productivity gap between the U.S and European economic heavyweights would have been reduced by 29 percent for the U.K., 35 percent for France, and 101% for Germany.
You know shit’s bad when US media starts using the ‘China bad’ classic “but at what cost?” byline toward US consumers
Im guessing there’s a sister article somewhere on Forbes reporting lower than anticipated earnings for US phone manufacturers
Maybe don’t base the economy on e-waste?
What kind of twatwaffle writes this crap. Fuck your planned obsolescence.
…i believe only one country has “planned obsolescence” as an illegal business practice…
Bhutan?
After a quick search, it seems to be France. I wouldn’t have guessed that in a thousand years, judging their car industry…
Holy shit keeping a device longer than 2 years is “device hoarding” now? Thats fucking nuts.
How do you invest so much money in a device like that and not make it last? I’ve got one phone I use for work calls thats 10 years old. People are still shocked I dont even have a case on it.
This is blaming consumers for companies not doing a better job at planned obsolescence.
When every single business is slowly getting to the point where they need you to be a consumer removed just to survive, yes.
It’s because economists haven’t got the memo yet that informs them that smartphones have been recategorized as, “durable goods”.
My last phone up until a couple months ago was from 2017, apparently I am just a mega hoarder. Don’t look at the pile of miscellaneous bits of tech, the Omnisiah demands I collect the shinnies.
Honestly, if I could just upgrade the CPU and replace the battery every once in a while, is still be using a Note 3 or nexus 5. Those first few generations of notes were awesome.
…hands up anyone using laptops or desktops older than 15 years?.. …right here, removed…lol…
“The economy” is code for rich people’s profits.
The economic outlook is nobody having jobs and a bunch of racist sexist pedofile trillionares saying they own everything because of corruption. It’s pretty clear the consumer based economy is being dissolved for a new debt based feudal system where everything is owned and you’re allowed to live as a debtor slave or live in a for profit prison or die.
Won’t somebody please think of the economy?!?
Maybe I’m old but it feels like the days of meaningful improvements have passed. Now it’s just a slightly different design for the sake of the annual release schedule. Why change when this 4 year old device is still supported and functions just fine?
Phones are where PCs were ~20 years ago. We’re getting past the stage where it’s a piece of outdated crap after 6 months and the improvements now are incremental.
This is it, really. I used to upgrade every year or two and flash the latest and greatest ROM to be on the bleeding edge.
Now, none of that really seems like a huge difference anymore other than GrapheneOS for privacy and security.
It’s just incremental improvements and none of the reparability I want, so I wait until it’s really necessary to upgrade now.
I have a 6 year old iphone. And the literal only enticing feature of the new ones is that the base models have 4x the storage space lol
Mine is now 3.5 years old. I bought a new flagship model with the idea it’d last a long time. Only now are new ‘features’ and updates coming out on new models, and even those are minor. Plus mine still has company support.
Sacrifice yourselves for the economy

And the planet.
Yeah, I mean, it came up from my phone company lately, and I didn’t see a point in changing yet. My phone is fine, the battery is the only thing that could be a bit better.
Maybe if more of “the economy” went into the pockets of consumers they’d have money to buy phones as often as they used to.
They could’ve also said CEOs are hoarding more wealth than ever and it’s costing the economy.
Also, phone manufacturers, for one, took my headphone jack, removable storage, removable battery, crammed in more crapware, made rooting even harder, and keep aggravating my RSI with bigger and bigger screens. Why the hell would I look forward to an upgrade?
God forbid we sacrifice one-third of a percent of productivity to reduce our impact on nature.
…so the joke goes… A woman comes into the store where she bought a toaster 45 years previous, she wishes to compliment the company for its many years of use and get a new toaster. The salesman is beside himself and calls his supervisor. The supervisor is also surprised and calls his boss in regional sales. Eventually, the woman is sent to the President of the company where she is thanked for her continues patronage, and is given a new toaster. The President of the company takes the old toaster to his Research and Development Department, and tells them, “Find out how this lasted so long and make sure it NEVER happens again!”
Good, fuck the economy
They already did, that’s the problem. If they want more consumer spending they need to fix the wealth gap, but they don’t want to do that. They want to keep the pump running that transfers wealth from the poor to the rich but it’s starting to stall and they’re panicking, hence pieces like this.









