E
edziu
Guest
Consumers should check whether the likely
benefi ts of these contracts justify the additional
cost and especially that the extended warranty
is not duplicating statutory rights that exist
anyway.
Sellers who offer such warranties risk breaching
the Act if they misrepresent either the real
benefi ts or a consumer's need for them.
Examples.........
In the ACCC's view a consumer is entitled to a
refund if a TV that could be expected to last at
least 10 years develops a serious fault after
12 months.
A consumer would probably be more than
satisfi ed with a two-year run from a $10 watch
but not if it had cost $2000.
see more .........
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/322947/fromItemId/653915
Cheers,
Ed.
benefi ts of these contracts justify the additional
cost and especially that the extended warranty
is not duplicating statutory rights that exist
anyway.
Sellers who offer such warranties risk breaching
the Act if they misrepresent either the real
benefi ts or a consumer's need for them.
Examples.........
In the ACCC's view a consumer is entitled to a
refund if a TV that could be expected to last at
least 10 years develops a serious fault after
12 months.
A consumer would probably be more than
satisfi ed with a two-year run from a $10 watch
but not if it had cost $2000.
see more .........
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/322947/fromItemId/653915
Cheers,
Ed.