Another friendly debate. Question: Do you think that giving a gift card as a present is a good or bad idea. I'd like to hear other people's opinions on this one.
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Are gift cards a good or bad present?
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
Can't think of a good reason to use these. Convenience and you pay dearly for it.
1. Give free money loan to the store until card is used
2. Limits what receiver can purchase
3. Receiver may not like anything at store
Better to give cash or a check. Solves all these problems
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
Originally posted by miclasonI consider them a last resort, too....Really good for teenagers, though, as it is generally difficult to give them EXACTLY what they wanted!!..
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
Although I tend to agree with moneyrant that cash is a better gift, there are times when cash or a check aren't quite appropriate. I don't think I would give cash to a teacher as divatribe mentioned, but I would certainly consider giving a fgift card.
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
As a teacher I love gift cards. I also sometimes give them to my sons' teachers. For example I gave one last year to a teacher who is married with 2 sons-I gave her one to Bath and Body Works-she loved it.
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
I use gift cards or certificates for fathers day and mothers day, my family has started to count on them. I avoid cash becasue in my house cash is put in the bank for groceries and whatnot it doesn't go to the treat they were hoping for. ut then my mother gave my husband one to buy a ladder once and he went and bought clothes for the kids, serves her right for wanting him to buy a ladder at walmart.
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
I enjoy receiving them because I know that I can be a hard person to shop for when it comes to presents.
I also enjoy giving them because at least the person then can choose something they really want or need.
I do try to choose stores that I know the recipient shops at or enjoys.
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
Gift cards are great if you really dont understand the persons taste and you know that they absolutely love the store you are getting it from. The best gift of course is an actual gift where you know the person so well that you just "know" they will love it. Unfortunately we are a society that loves to buy and everyone has their own distinct taste. Therefore if the person gets the giftcard from their favourite store you will be satisfying their thrill of purchasing with a product they like.
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
I voted "It Depends" because there seems to be some sort of scandal going around here, where the gift card actually looses value- eventually to zero- if its not used within a specified amount of time. Then they charge administrative fees to them too. This gift card would NOT be a good idea.
A walmart gift card, on the other hand, doesn't have these kinds of restrictions/expiration dates etc and so it would be a better gift card to give.
Then it depends on the receiver. If while my mother was still living gift cards were as popular as they are now, she would have had a hissy. She was a stickler for finding the appropriate gift for the receiver and giving them what they wished for. Giving cash and gift cards was taboo for her, so I knew better than to give her one, but that didn't stop me from giving them to others.
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
Here's an article about bad gift cards:
Mall owner sued over gift card rules
By RENEE DEGROSS
Cox News Service
Thursday, December 09, 2004
ATLANTA — Former Georgia Gov. Roy Barnes is taking on the nation's biggest mall owner in a fight over fees and expiration dates on gift cards and certificates.
Barnes, an attorney, is representing two Atlanta area shoppers in a lawsuit filed Wednesday against Simon Property Group, owner of Lenox Square and several other metro area malls.
The suit contends fees and expiration dates on Simon's gift cards and certificates are illegal and should be stopped. The suit seeks class action status, which if granted would likely expand the case to thousands of Georgians.
A spokeswoman for Simon said the company hadn't seen the suit and had no immediate comment.
The challenge comes as holiday shoppers buy fistfuls of gift cards as an alternative to regular presents. Gift cards are expected to account for $17.2 billion in holiday sales, or 8 percent of the total, the National Retail Federation says.
Cards sold by some big retailers, such as Wal-Mart and Home Depot, do not expire or carry fees that cut the value over time. But others do. Simon cards lose $2.50 in value each month, starting seven months after purchase, and expire one year after purchase.
Andrea Nay-Richardson, one of the lawsuit plaintiffs, bought $400 of Simon gift certificates at Lenox Square in May 2001 and wound up keeping them for herself. Upon trying to use one in 2002, she was told it had expired and was worthless, the lawsuit said.
"I was upset that I spent my money on stuff that I wasn't able to redeem," Nay-Richardson said. "After I tried to redeem the first one [and it had expired], I tossed the rest of them."
The other plaintiff, Betty Benson, claims she also lost money after her employer gave her a $75 Simon gift card that expired before she used it.
"That's just not right," Barnes said. "This affects everyone. These are small claims and these are consumer rights."
The suit contends that the value of an unused gift card is unclaimed property that must be turned over to the state so it can be reclaimed by the owner.
"It's like any other abandoned property in the state," Barnes said. "It's a long-standing law in Georgia and even if it's never claimed or used, it belongs to Georgia, not Simon."
The suit also claims the expiration dates violate Georgia law requiring Simon to honor cards for five years. It contends that the administrative fees are not properly disclosed, and that Simon does not incur actual expenses of $2.50 per month on cards not used after seven months.
The lawsuit seeks damages for defendants, plus reasonable attorneys' fees, not to exceed $75,000 per person.
Simon sells gift cards at its more than 300 malls nationwide.
The company converted its gift cards recently to Simon Visa gift cards, which now list expiration dates on the front of cards
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Re: Are gift cards a good or bad present?
You need to choose gift cards very carefully and know the terms and conditions that go with them. Virtually all bank issued gift cards (VISA, MasterCard, American Express, etc.) carry a lot of fees. Retail and Mall store gift card vary widely with some having no fees and other being just as bad as the bank cards. You need to me careful because the last thing you want to do is give money meant for the recipient to the store.
<A HREF="http://www.savingadvice.com/forums/showthread.php?t=3044"> Gift Card & Fees - Why Gift Cards Aren't A Good Present</A>
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