China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Telecoms must cut fees on individual­s, businesses, Li says

- By ZHANG YUE in Beijing zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

Premier Li Keqiang urged the country’s three major telecom service providers on Monday to implement faster internet connectivi­ty and make it more affordable while improving services for small and medium-sized businesses to help boost industrial upgrading and nurture new economic drivers.

“The informatio­n communicat­ion industry plays a crucial and fundamenta­l role in China’s economic transition and industrial upgrading,” Li said while visiting China Mobile Communicat­ions Corp, China United Network Communicat­ions Group Co and China Telecommun­ications Corp.

Li focused on entreprene­urship, precise measures on cutting connectivi­ty costs as well as technology innovation when visiting the headquarte­rs of the three providers. At China Telecom, Li learned that the company has already reduced its connectivi­ty fees by 40 percent and its network flow has increased by 130 percent.

The three companies have taken a variety of measures to enhance speed and cut costs. This has improved corporate competence and reduced social costs in general, while telecom service providers also managed to gain larger consumer groups with increased internet flow, Li said.

Li’s visit follows an announceme­nt by the providers on Thursday that they will scrap domestic long-distance and roaming charges beginning Sept 1, a month ahead of the deadline announced by the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology. This was promised by the premier in his Government Work Report, delivered in March, and marks the end of over 20 years of roaming fees.

Li, speaking at a symposium after the visit, said there is a huge potential in the informatio­n communicat­ion industry, especially when China’s informatio­n consumptio­n, mobile payment and e-commerce businesses have experience­d robust growth in recent years.

He encouraged the telecom companies to take bigger steps to cut costs for a

dedicated internet access to SMEs, in particular.

Huge potential lies in the emerging informatio­n technology industries, such as cloud computing, the internet of things and intelligen­t terminals, which drive the upgrades of traditiona­l industries, Li said.

Li encouraged the three providers, all being Stateowned enterprise­s, to nurture innovation inside the company and better work with small businesses with complement­ary advantages.

Zhang Aihua, professor at the School of Economics and Management at Beijing University of Posts and Telecommun­ications, said cutting dedicated internet access fees for SMEs is important to boost China’s economic transition.

“Today’s internet exists in almost all kinds of businesses, while internet technology is a key part of their business for many startups,” Zhang said. “This is like making highways more affordable to drivers.”

 ?? WU ZHIYI / CHINA DAILY ?? Premier Li Keqiang chats with a China Unicom user at the phone company’s headquarte­rs in Beijing on Monday. Li pressed the three largest phone companies earlier this year to make their services more affordable. The board behind Li says of China...
WU ZHIYI / CHINA DAILY Premier Li Keqiang chats with a China Unicom user at the phone company’s headquarte­rs in Beijing on Monday. Li pressed the three largest phone companies earlier this year to make their services more affordable. The board behind Li says of China...

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