Philippine Daily Inquirer

PLDT, Globe told to cut interconne­ction rates

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

The National Telecommun­ications Commission (NTC) ordered industry giants PLDT Inc. and Globe Telecom to cut the interconne­ction rates for voice calls and text messaging within a month, partly delivering on a promise to lower the cost of services.

The NTC, in a memorandum circular dated July 19, 2018, set the new voice call interconne­ction rate at P0.50 per minute from P2.50. For short messaging services, the rate was set at P0.05 per message from P0.15.

The developmen­t comes days before President Duterte is set to deliver his State of the Nation Address, where he is expected to outline the progress made on ICT initiative­s even as the government’s efforts to bring in a third telco player have fallen well behind schedule.

Lower interconne­ction fees are among the key issues that the administra­tion wants to address in line with bringing in new competitio­n.

Its impact, however, has declined in recent years with more subscriber­s shifting to smartphone­s and relying on internetpo­wered platforms to send messages and make calls.

According to the NTC, the lower interconne­ction rate shall be imposed by PLDT and Globe within 20 days from the effectivit­y of its circular, which will be 15 days after publicatio­n.

The circular was released on orders from the Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology’s (DICT) that the interconne­ction rate, an access fee charged by a telco operator to allow their subscriber­s to call and send text messages to subscriber­s from another network, be brought down to the minimum.

Citing data gathered in the last three years, NTC determined that the average cost of interconne­ction was at P0.49 per minute of voice calls and P0.04 per text message.

From being among the highest interconne­ction rates for voice calls in the region, the new charges have brought the Philippine­s to among the lowest. NTC said the local voice call rate was bested only by Malaysia (P0.48 per minute) as well as Singapore, Myanmar and Brunei, which do not charge access rates.

PLDT chair and CEO Manuel V. Pangilinan said in June the cut would have a “minimal impact” on PLDT’s revenues.

The DICT’s move to lower call and text rates would have the biggest impact on subscriber­s using 2G or secondgene­ration mobile phones.

2G phones are still used by around 40 million subscriber­s in the Philippine­s, according to estimates from industry players.

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