Week of November 18, 2024
(see last week)
Airlines Most Likely To Be Overbooked and Bump You
<! -------------------COLUMN 2 (MIDDLE) ----------------------- -->
Consumer World Original
A new survey reveals how aware shoppers are about product shrinkage, what they do when they spot it, and whether they would just rather have manufacturers raise the item's price rather than shrink it. That story is in Mouse Print* this week.
Check out our annual list of tips to help you snare the best deals during Black Friday sales.
Some prescriptions can be dirt cheap, but others can break the bank. This story shows you many ways to cut your prescription drug costs. For example, manufacturers often have programs offering discount cards or coupons that many people may not be aware of. A friend was able to get a $2,000 a month drug for nothing under one of these programs. Even better, the $2,000 value of each prescription helped lower his conventional (non-Medicare) medical insurance deductible and out-of-pocket maximum for the year. A warning for Medicare recipients who do not have drug coverage in their advantage or supplement plan: there is a one-percent per month penalty for that.
Over the past few years, consumer agencies like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the Department of Transportation (DOT) have come up with various regulations and actions designed to protect consumers. These include bans on hidden junk fees and fake product reviews, requiring all inclusive pricing of airfares, requiring one-click cancellation of subscriptions, cracking down on annoying robocalls, requiring cable companies to clearly disclose all prices in advance, securing billions in refunds for victims of scams, and more. The worry is with a change in administrations, this new golden age of consumer protection may be dismantled.
One type of insurance fraud involves a scammer staging a car crash in order to collect insurance money from an innocent driver. In this remarkable video, an innocent woman had her dashcam on and caught a fraudster backing up into her car. The good news is New York police caught one of the perpetrators and they are still looking for the others.
Consumer AlertBeware Staged Crashes for Fraudulent Insurance Claims
PAYWALL Note: We try to feature free stories that are fully readable. If you are blocked reading a Wall Street Journal story, get a free, renewable 3-day PASS. And if you hit the New York Times paywall, here is a three-day pass you can sign up for. For other blocked stories try a different browser and clear cookies of that site from it. Some newspapers may block you based on your repeated use of their site, or convert previously free stories to pay stories without notice.
Enter an item, or preferably paste its Amazon URL (address)
|
Every Monday morning, get a preview of the latest consumer stories and the Bargain of the Week in your email box...free! Sign up now.
ADV
See also: Hot Deals
Consumer Reports
Follow Consumer World® on Twitter and Facebook.
Copyright © 1995-2024 Consumer World®. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy and Terms
|