JimmyV
Por favor manténganse alejado de las puertas.
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2008
- Messages
- 8,060
Doing it OOP before the price increase we would have been within $100 or so.
This, to me, pretty much ends the discussion. Some people, based on group size and eating habits, will do well on a plan. Other people will not for the same reasons. But as noted in the quote above, on average, the difference in price will be fairly negligible. This has to be the case if you assume two things to be true (which I do):
1. You can't fool all of the people all of the time. There are a lot of people buying dining plans, and a lot of these people are doing the math before committing to the plans. Not all of these people can be idiots. The system has to be saving somebody some money somewhere along the line or it would have been exposed as a fraud a long time ago.
2. Disney does not roll out new programs or continue to offer programs that cost it money. They are not in the business of giving things away. So while we can microanaylze the dining plans on a family by family basis, on average, and in the long run, Disney is, at best, breaking even on people buying the plans, and in all likelihood, profiting from people buying the plans. And if they are profiting, then we, collectively, are losing. It is a zero sum game. But the buyers can take comfort in the fact that their "loss" is accompanied by what they consider to be convenience, so there is a fair trade there.
When properly applied, the cost of dining plan should come close to the cost of OOP, and as noted above, a $100 swing one way or the other is probably about right in most instances. People who plan their meals and menu selections carefully can probably do better. So perhaps we will see DP+ in the future with an eye toward curtailing the "super users".