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Dáil Éireann debate -
Thursday, 19 Nov 1987

Vol. 375 No. 6

Ceisteanna—Questions. Oral Answers. - Telephone Charges.

7.

asked the Minister for Communications in respect of each application to increase a charge for telephone services under section 90 (2) of the 1983 Telecommunications Act or previous similar enactment, the scientific, social and accounting basis upon which Telecom Éireann calculated the scales of telephone charges; whether in respect of each such application the company supplied him with information regarding any cross-subsidisation by business or domestic users, by international or local callers, or by any other category and, if so, the nature of the information; and the way in which the present scale of charges in each category compares with those in each other EC country.

Tariff principles for telecommunications services have developed historically out of a complex trade-off between commercial considerations and universal service goals rather than in response to articulated scientific, social and accounting bases.

Two applications for increases in charges have been considered since the passing of the 1983 Act and these were evaluated against the requirement placed by the Act on the company to keep its charges for services at the minimum rate consistent with meeting approved financial targets and to ensure that the revenue of the company is sufficient to meet all charges properly chargeable to revenue account, generate a reasonable proportion of capital needs, remunerate capital and repay borrowings.

So far as cross-subsidisation is concerned, the legislation setting up Bord Telecom Éireann acknowledges, in granting its exclusive privilege for providing telecommunications messages within the State, that a viable national telecommunications system involves subsidisation of some loss-making services by profit-making services. It is clear, therefore, that any uniform structure of telecommunications charges must involve complex systems of cross subsidisation.

Because of the variation and complexity of pricing structures, and leaving aside altogether currency exchange considerations and problems of purchasing power parities, a comparison of telephone charges between different countries is seldom straightforward. However I propose to circulate in the Official Report a tabular statement showing a comparison of telephone charges in the various EC countries.

Comparison of Telephone Charges in EC Countries

Country

Business Subscriber Quarterly Rental

Residential Subscriber Quarterly Rental

Local Call Three Mins. Peak

Trunk Call Fee Over 100 km: Three Mins.

Off Peak

Peak

£

£

£

£

£

Belgium*

24.57

24.57

.1069

.24

.48

Denmark*

22.77

22.77

.0488

.12

.24

France*

13.04

13.04

.0814

.61

1.22

Ger. F.R.

30.46

30.46

.0865

.40

1.30

Greece

24.59

24.59

.0187

.37

.52

Ireland

36.08

33.30

.1117

.67

1.01

Italy*

25.54

10.72

.1501

.43

1.23

L'bourg*

13.47

13.47

.0898

.09

.09

N'lands

21.76

21.76

.0501

.10

.19

Portugal

16.17

16.17

.0350

.52

.79

Spain

15.90

15.90

.0347

.31

.68

UK

34.28

22.02

.1704

.23

.57

*Rental charges vary according to the number of customers available at the local call rate or the geographical location of the customer.

Will the Minister circulate details of the cross-subsidisation of the different categories of user in the present tariff structure? Will he indicate if this cross-subsidisation has the effect that provincial callers are charged a larger sum than they might otherwise be charged if the calls were priced on commercial grounds and does the same apply in the case of international calls?

In general terms, under the present structure the more frequent users subsidise the lower users, business customers subsidise the residential customers, areas with high telephone density subsidise the low density areas, call charges subsidise rental and connection charges, short local calls subsidise long local calls and international charges subsidise national charges. That is roughly the way the system works.

Will the Minister give us his view on the rumour that Telecom Éireann might alter the position as it now applies in regard to local calls being charged on an untimed basis?

It is not appropriate to answer questions based on rumours.

Were proposals made at EC level or by the international telecommunications union which would have the effect of regulating subsidisation of one category of user as against another and in particular, were there moves which would require that any cross-subsidisation of local users by international calls could be deemed to be contrary to an internationally agreed norm?

There have been talks on this matter at EC level. However, it would be premature to say how those talks are going to turn out.

Has the Commission published a proposal?

The Deputy will have to put down a separate question on that matter.

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