This Is Awesome: Amazon Announces a 45% Prime Discount for Lower-Income Shoppers
Sure, it’s a bid to enlarge Amazon’s customer pool, but every little bit of corporate kindness that can ease the strain on people’s lives in America is welcome these days.
Amazon’s 45% discount on its popular Prime membership—$5.99 a month instead of $10.99—is available to U.S. residents who are receiving government assistance via an EBT (Electronic Transfer Benefits) card. Holders of EBT cards can apply here for the discount, though they’ll have to re-qualify each year, for up to four years, according to Recode. It’s unclear whether they’d still be eligible after the four-year period.
The Recode story points out that this is an obvious instance of Amazon gunning for more of Walmart’s demographic, as the two supplier giants engage in escalating price battles. Well, good. Amazon Prime is a great service that allows for free shipping on tons of items unavailable elsewhere, not to mention host to many TV shows and movies that come with Prime, and other perks, like access to The Washington Post free for several months.
It’s a grocery store/mall/bookstore/newsstand/Netflix alternative all bound up together, and it should be made available to as many people as possible regardless of their monthly income status. Most importantly, many will now be able to skip the physical shopping trip for essentials that can be shipped through Prime, and use that time otherwise.
Memberships to time-and-money saving services like Prime shouldn’t be an expensive, exclusive club. Considering Prime has been around since 2005, this is a long time coming, but it’s a step in the right direction that other corporations would be wise to consider.
(via Recode, image: Shutterstock)
Want more stories like this? Become a subscriber and support the site!
—The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—
Have a tip we should know? tips@themarysue.com