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Cable Television Bills Have Nearly Tripled In The Past 10 Years

Cable Bill

The Huffington Post     First Posted: 12/30/11 09:54 AM ET Updated: 12/30/11 01:49 PM ET

Do you feel like your cable bill is significantly higher than it used to be? That's probably because it is.

The average cable TV subscriber pays nearly three times as much for cable now as they did in 2001, according to research by SNL Kagan cited by the Wall Street Journal. The jump in average prices -- to about $128 per month from $48 -- may not be good for cable providers; executives have said publicly that they're worried that a boost in bills will push customers away.

But while the cost of cable service has risen, the costs of the televisions themselves continues to trend downward. Indeed, an early television cost nearly $10,000 once adjusted to modern-day prices.

That price decline unfortunately hasn't been enough to offset the costs of even the most basic of necessities for many struggling Americans: Nearly half of all households today are economically insecure, according to a recent report by Wider Opportunities for Women. And higher television bills aren't helping.

An increase in the costs for original cable programming as well as a boost in sports fees may be in large part responsible for the hike in bills, according to the Los Angeles Times. As cable companies see their costs rise, they pass them on to consumers. Still, the squeeze doesn't seem to be hurting the cable providers too much -- for many media companies, cable channels are their most profitable sector.

The battle over who is to blame for high cable costs has grown increasingly heated in recent months. The NFL and ESPN inked a controversial deal earlier this year, prompting many media executives to blame the league and the network for rising cable costs, according to a separate report in the WSJ. Liberty Media Corp. CEO Greg Maffai called the boost in the cost of ESPN a "tax on every American household."

But it's not only increasing sports programming fees that have cable providers worried. Some cable executives have expressed concern that with the availability of television on the internet, viewers will stop signing up for cable, according to The New York Times. Some cable providers, such as Time Warner Cable, are considering charging data usage fees in an effort to make money off of the rising use of services like Hulu and Netflix, Bloomberg reports.

Still, cable executives' fears that rising internet viewership would turn customers away from cable doesn't seem to have materialized. Most Americans that decide to cancel their cable bills do so because of poverty, not because they're choosing to watch on the internet, the NYT reports.

Which states are seeing wages jump most, helping residents to pay the bills?

10. Chicago, IL
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Q3 2011 year-over-year percentage change in pay: 0.5 percent

 
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07:52 AM on 01/04/2012
I am suprised at how few comments are listed. I may have came into this discussion at the very end.
08:09 PM on 01/03/2012
Cable fees should be based on what you watch....."Bundle" is a word I hate....why should I pay for channels I don't watch......."Deep Pockets, crooks, Greed plus various fees I know nothing about are being paid so these jerks can increase their (personal) bottom line. Remember larger companies than yours have gone belly-up do to their customers being charged higher costs/fees.....Stand up for the customers rights and tell these over-priced companies to go somewhere else.......let another company lose the business, at least you'll be employed and your company will be in business.
01:27 AM on 01/02/2012
I wish they would let me pick and choose the channels and my bill would go way down. I don't watch sports and the music channels are a waist but to remove them means my bill goes up because of the bundling deals .....I would go to satelite but if you got a yard full of trees they guy across the street has to turn it on and off during different times of the year. I am OCD and that is too much change for me....so when I am broke and cannot post anymore then you know.... poverty got me too. It has me but so far I still have this one very extravagant entertainment. If they go up one more time..... I will watch DVD's only and my phone and internet is gone too.....sigh. My doctor is charging me cash and saying it is because of Obama Care but he still takes insurance on procedures.???? Is he breaking a law?
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Mindy Czech
Cindy's wife for life.
06:14 PM on 12/31/2011
Cable has gotten much more expensive, but they do have some superior programming. I mean, basic cable is mostly a barren wasteland of reality TV shows, but they do have "Breaking Bad" and "The Walking Dead" on AMC TV. The premium channels, however, are the channels I watch the most of. HBO, Showtime, have far superior programming to anything else on television. I barely watch basic anymore, and never watch network, with the exception of Jimmy Fallon.
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gwilder
Independent, Author, Parent, Musician, American
02:12 PM on 12/31/2011
I gave up on cable sometime ago. They money vultures. I don't need a bunch channels I will never watch and out of control increases in my monthly bill. They can have it.
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Heidi Dietrich
Furkids are people too.
11:53 AM on 12/31/2011
It doesn't surprise me in the least. I don't have cable and it's all because I think they have gotten greedy and think they can charge whatever they want. I use satellite and get good stuff for less. I refuse to go back to cable. I keep getting mail from Comcast asking me to subscribe. I don't think so. My grandfather saw this coming years ago even before cable was invented. He said that one day, they would charge for channels. He was right. I hope the powers in cable feel this in their pocket books, the big jerks.
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rewith85man
Expressing Who I Am
11:08 PM on 12/30/2011
More money, less good shows.