There is an article in today's Lexington Herald Leader regarding the change, and how much the local KMArt's sales have increased since the announcement by Wal Mart. Several interviewed by the paper stated they were at KMart solely due to the fact that Wal Mart was doing away with layaway. Meijer still has layaway for those in the Great Lakes region.
I assume this is the article you are referring to:
Link It comments that there's been a noticeable uptick in business at the K-marts' layaway counter, but keep in mind that given the overhead costs associated with layaway, this increase in sales may not translate into an increase in profits. K-mart, in the end, may not be too happy about being on the receiving end of Wal-mart's layaway "burden".
I'm not sure that stores really want to encourage credit card purchases over layaway plans. They have to give 2-3% to the CC company for the purchase. For small layaways, that 2-3% is cheaper than manpower, but for high ticket items-I would want to keep that money in house.
This doesn't apply with the CC issuer is
you. Wal-mart and others are offer their own "no money down, no payments for X months" credit programs.
I think it's safe to say that the financial analysts at Wal-mart looked at the industry trends, looked at their customers' usage trends, looked at the costs associated with offering the service, and figured in that it'd tick some people off that'd go elsewhere and decided that it didn't make sense to continue the program. Once upon a time layaway was used as an effective means to produce incremental sales... stores never offered the service merely to "be nice" to their customers. Wal-mart has joined the party of retailers that have decided that the program isn't helping their bottom-line like it used to and have therefore dropped it.
As others have pointed out, financially, a Christmas Club account is a perfectly good alternative to using layaway. If you have money to put against the stuff you have on layaway, you have it to put into an account that'll at least pay you a
little interest on top. And if in the end you've decided that someone's been naughtier than nice, you can take the money and do something else with it.
If you're someone that used Wal-mart to hide your "big stuff", then can you blame Wal-mart for not wanting to spend the resources to warehouse it for you for free???