In other cases, they say, consumers get the wrong kind of help.
The important thing is that consumers get lower prices and more quality for their money.
Consumers get to pay what they want for an album.
Consumers get to pay what an album is worth to them.
"In the summer of 1992, competition worked and the American consumer got the best deal he's ever had," he said.
"Consumers just might get better prices than they would be able to negotiate on their own."
The consumer gets the catalogue and makes his or her choice.
The economy might be slowing, but consumers are not getting the message.
We want consumers to get hold of the product and we're committed to making that happen.
Consumers thus got the wrong message: that fiber isn't so important.