Is Your Phone the Reason You Feel Broke? (2024)

screen time

The smartphone economy is booming — and it also feels awful.

By John Herrman, a contributing writer who covers technology at Intelligencer. Formerly, he was a reporter and critic at the New York Times and co-editor of The Awl.

Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Is Your Phone the Reason You Feel Broke? (3)

Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

For the past year, the political class has been wearing itself out over what sounds like a simple question: Why are Americans so down on the economy? Wages are rising, unemployment is low, labor participation is high, and inflation is slowing. Look at the Consumer Price Index! The Biden economy is pretty great, actually, and yet less than a fifth of the public will concede that the state of the economy is even “good.” Okay, but while inflation is in some sense under control, and some goods and services are even getting cheaper, prices remain noticeably high; likewise, interest rates, while no longer rising, have frozen the housing market, leaving homeowners and renters alike feeling stuck in place or worse. Look at the Consumer Price Index! The Biden economy is pretty terrible, actually, and yet seemingly nobody in charge will concede that it’s even sort of bad.

One point of agreement is that core indicators seem to have diverged from how people report actually feeling about the economy or are insufficient to explain such things in the first place. This sentimental breakdown presents as either a tricky puzzle or a severe emergency, depending, for example, on whether or not you’re trying to remain president. In the absence of a definitive story, pet theories rule supreme: about the media and the vibes; about the real meaning of high spending; about political pessimism bleeding into everything else; about various related smaller feelings adding up to a big bad mood. You’ve got to give the prices some credit, though. Nobody would suggest it’s the most important thing in the world, but store-bought Diet co*ke has gone up 65 percent in five years, which sure feels like a rip-off and not not a sign that something bigger is wrong, no matter how much money you make.

America’s economic pessimism is, in other words, an aggregated expression of overlapping narratives, millions of anecdotal truths represented by a blunt number moving in the wrong direction. You can argue with these experiences at your peril, or you can try to understand them. Together, though, they represent the sort of problem that can be difficult to see all at once, to shrink down to a size one can grasp, or to express in terms that pretty much everyone understands. If only there were some kind of all-in-one product owned by most Americans that captured the defining economic contradictions of our moment. A universal thing that costs more than it used to, through which Americans also spend a lot more than they used to, that they engage with more than ever but which they’ve also come to resent. Some sort of compact, pocketable symbol of narrowly quantifiable progress experienced instead as broad emotional decline. A unified interface for the personal, social, commercial, and cultural forces that combine, or conspire, to produce fatalism. If only we all had smartphones, and they were connected to the internet.

I won’t argue that smartphones are significantly responsible for America’s sense of economic malaise. What they are is unusually helpful for understanding and interpreting this malaise in common terms. They’re a heightened, sped-up microcosm of the weird, sour vibrancy of the economic moment, little worlds in which participants are both increasingly active and increasingly worried. By most measures, the smartphone economy is booming, and yet it also feels like sh*t in a way that everyone can feel for themselves, together, no matter what soda they drink.

It starts with the simple question of top-line price. There’s a funny caveat in the method the Bureau of Labor Statistics uses to determine the cost of smartphones for its Consumer Price Index. Smartphones, like a lot of other things, have been getting more expensive. They’re not eggs or gas or co*ke —you don’t think about their prices every week —but there’s a good chance you buy one every few years. The cheapest version the iPhone now starts at $800; the cheapest version of the flagship model, $1,200. Let’s venture to say that people have noticed this and do not love it. Since 2018, though, BLS economists have specified that, actually, due to the “rapid rate of technological advancements and improved quality to consumers,” including, as an example, increases in screen resolution, smartphones need a “hedonic quality adjustment” before inclusion in the CPI. As a result, smartphone prices have been recorded, in an official way directly relevant to debates about the economy, as going down. Makes sense, maybe. Feels wrong, definitely.

But purchases of smartphones make up a small part of a typical household budget. It’s the ongoing experience of using this device that is always with you, checked at least dozens of times a day, where one senses real change, and where we might make a crude hedonic adjustment in the other direction.

The new economy surrounding the smartphone tells a clear story. To engage with the app economy is to experience price-jacked Diet co*ke on a daily basis. Call it runaway inflation in the Smartphone Price Index. You’ve got adjacent services that were once free and which now cost money: Your Google account is full, and you need to pay to store all your old Gmail; your Apple account is running out of space, and suddenly you’re paying into perpetuity to keep your photos. There are the services you subscribed to, pay for, and use on your phone that keep increasing their prices: a few dollars more for Netflix, Disney, or Max; a price hike in Spotify or Apple Music; then your running app, your YouTube premium subscription, and your insurance-recommended therapy app. There are the “free” products that don’t really work unless you pay for upgrades: job apps, dating apps, pay-to-progress games. Even the big social-media apps, which made billions on your attention and personal data, are working out how to charge users. These payments, and their prices, are almost universally the sorts of things that, while certainly possible to explain or rationalize, and individually not terribly significant, add up in an unpleasant way. You’re getting charged a higher price for the privilege of doing or getting things that, at best, feel the same. It’s a pocketful of high gas prices.

It’s not just the inflationary app economy that wears you down. As tools for participating in the broader economy, smartphones are excellent at aggregating and exacerbating subjective indicators and bad feelings into a steady feed, or a stream of notifications, on that bigger, higher-resolution screen, powered by that faster processor. A smartphone provides interfaces for your bank, your credit cards, and the places you shop and spend money, work and make money, and pay your bills; it offers a lens for the economy that is either distorted or just unflattering, depending on your perspective. If you shop with your phone —as a fast-rising majority now do— it’s where you see and pay high prices and get invited to finance them. If you bank with it, it’s where you worry about your savings and encounter questionable new financial products; if you consume content with it, it’s where you hit all the paywalls.

A decade ago, you paid for a smartphone to get 24/7 access to a world that, while demanding of your attention and full of advertising, was made up of a greater share of pleasurable, novel, or at least elective stuff: social media; entertainment; communication with friends; a bit of freedom from your desk at work, if you wanted it. (It provided value, in other words, in a way that, while not without cost, eluded measurements like the CPI.) It was, or felt like, a pretty good deal, at least the first few times you made it. Now, smartphones are an obligatory purchase with an inverted purpose: to provide the rest of your life, which followed smartphone users online, with access to you. Your time-wasting gadget and helpful companion has become one with your bills, your boss, your obligations, and, via a stream of intrusive notifications mixed in with your personal business, your stress about the world. Buying an early smartphone was like getting a fun car to drive on your own time. Upgrading in 2023 can feel like buying a car to drive for Uber. Polling suggests a familiar dynamic, here. People use their smartphones more than ever —consumer confidence! — but this also stresses them out, especially if they’re young.

You can argue with these perceptions along familiar lines. People love to complain about the smartphones that they use obsessively, and the corporations subject to these complaints are often just following the revealed preferences of their customers, testing price elasticity, and pricing their products accordingly. Their costs are rising too. Smartphones are a marvel, and it’s customers’ fault for taking for granted remarkable technological change, or for complaining when they don’t get it for free. Maybe, even with the price hikes, these services remain excellent values. People aren’t quitting them en masse.

But maybe that’s because they feel a little bit stuck. The subjective experience remains: The device that used to be satisfied with your attention is now asking you to pay up and to do so at higher prices. Your digital subscription statements resemble self-storage rental bills, charging in the background and creeping up, up, and up. Widespread economic trends toward consolidation, monopoly, and rent-seeking manifest quickly and in caricature on phones: Online TV prices rose 24 percent in the past year, compared to about 3 percent across all goods, as content production slowed. All of this can make sense, if you need it too, while also feeling —and looking! —like a bait and switch, a series of small affronts that cost a little bit of money and a lot of goodwill, telling an incomplete but persuasive story of things moving in the wrong direction, forever — especially if you’re young. Smartphones aren’t taking all your money, or even much of it, in the grand scheme of things. But they’re taking more of it than before and rubbing it in your face. Analytically, maybe this is wrong. But again, take a look at the past week’s notifications on your phone. Would you call it crazy?

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Is Your Phone the Reason You Feel Broke?
Is Your Phone the Reason You Feel Broke? (2024)

FAQs

How often should you replace your phone? ›

Tech experts say it depends on a number of factors. Typically, phones nowadays are built to last on average about three years, but there are several ways you could easily give your current device that new-phone feel.

How many times does the average person break their phone? ›

Hold onto your phones – according to new research, one in three Americans currently have a crack in their phone's screen. The constant threat of dropping our phones and cracking the screen – or worse – is leaving many of us with a bit of “Phone-xiety.”

How do you know when you need a new phone? ›

Smartphone users should prepare to update to a newer model when they notice these signs:
  1. Dwindling battery life.
  2. Cracked screen or physical damage.
  3. Unresponsive or delayed touchscreen.
  4. Out of storage space.
  5. Applications crash or restart frequently.
  6. Phone frequently overheats.
  7. Cords disconnect from ports and jacks.
Dec 14, 2023

Is it good to stay off your phone? ›

The good news is if you limit how often you use your phone, you will notice life-changing benefits, including: Less anxiety and stress. With less stimulation from calls, texts, social media updates and “urgent” emails, you may have less chronic stress and anxiety. More clarity.

What is the average lifespan of a phone? ›

As mentioned above, the average lifespan of a cell phone is approximately 2-3 years. However, manufacturers tend to focus on ensuring users enjoy excellent performance during the whole period. So, even though they often provide longer battery life, it doesn't necessarily mean the phone will last longer.

What is the average life of a cell phone? ›

The lifespan lowdown

Today, the average lifespan of smartphones is around 2.5 years. It could be even less for some devices – between 15 and 18 months. That's not much when phones cost hundreds or even thousands of dollars.

Who breaks their phone the most? ›

As you might suspect, young people are slightly more likely to break their phones, with 77% of us between the ages of 18 and 29 having broken a phone. But older generations are not immune to the dropsies, with a very similar 74% of us between 30 and 44 having broken a phone.

Is 3 hours of phone ok? ›

What's a healthy amount of screen time for adults? Experts say adults should limit screen time outside of work to less than two hours per day. Any time beyond that which you would typically spend on screens should instead be spent participating in physical activity.

What is the most common damage to a phone? ›

Cracked Screens

One of the most common types of damage to cell phones is a cracked screen. It can occur due to a drop or a bump. Even a minor crack can lead to bigger problems if left unaddressed. The best way to prevent a cracked screen is to use a protective case and screen protector.

How do I know if my phone is dying? ›

6 signs your phone is on its last legs
  • Lagging: Remember when your apps ran seamlessly? ...
  • Battery blues: If your phone's gasping for juice by midday after being fully charged in the morning, it's a big sign. ...
  • Storage wars: The dreaded “Storage Almost Full” notification is more than an annoyance.
Sep 14, 2023

How do you know if your phone is damaged internally? ›

Look for screen flickering, unresponsive touch controls, or sudden freezes. These issues may suggest internal damage [1]. Inspect the exterior: While internal damage may not always be visible from the outside, it's still worth checking for any visible signs of damage.

Do iPhones last longer than androids? ›

In my experience, iPhones tend to have a longer usable life compared to Samsung phones. This is because Apple is known for their high-quality hardware and software, which allows their devices to have a longer lifespan.

Is it bad to shut down my phone every night? ›

Many tech experts recommend users power down their mobile devices each day—and not just because it's a smart part of maintenance. Our mobile devices enable us to work from anywhere, keep up with the news, access entertainment and stay in touch, and many of us spend large chunks of the day using them.

What happens if you don't use your phone for a year? ›

In conclusion, leaving a phone unused for a year can negatively impact the battery life, software updates, and storage capacity. iPhones and Android phones, like the ones available at phonedaddy.com, can experience these issues if used for a short time.

What is nomophobia? ›

Abstract. The term NOMOPHOBIA or NO MObile PHone PhoBIA is used to describe a psychological condition when people have a fear of being detached from mobile phone connectivity. The term NOMOPHOBIA is constructed on definitions described in the DSM-IV, it has been labelled as a “phobia for a particular/specific things”.

Should I replace my phone after 5 years? ›

Generally speaking, Android smartphones last 3-5 years, but many factors can shorten or extend their lifespan. The most crucial factor in how long an Android phone lasts is how you treat it. A phone you take good care of lasts longer than one you drop, soak with water, or otherwise mistreat.

How long should I keep my old phone? ›

In general, it is quite safe to keep using your phone as long as it's receiving regular software security updates from the manufacturer. For example, Apple is still updating the security of software for iPhones that are up to eight years old. Let's say you have a six-year-old iPhone X.

How often should I get a new iPhone? ›

While upgrading your iPhone yearly can be expensive, waiting too long can result in sluggish performance and reduced battery life. Upgrading their device every 2-3 years is a good rule of thumb for most users. This allows you to take advantage of the latest features and improvements without breaking the bank.

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