irrelevant wrote on Dec 13
th, 2009 at 7:06pm:
Here's a few figures to get you started. ...
I have been working on the later figures (for Q1 09/10) published by Ofcom in September:
These give BT 46.7% of residential call volumes, Virgin Media 16.6% and 36.7% for Others.
Virgin Media charges more for 0845 than geographic calls in all cases. Talk Talk, Sky, PO Homephone, Tiscali and others follow BT by charging less.
There are other tables that break down by call type, however these do not distinguish residential callers from business. I have gently attempted to press Ofcom for more information from their source data, in particular in the breakdown of "Others", but without success.
BT has stated that around 10% of its call plan customers are on Anytime.
From these very rough figures one may conclude that something approaching 79% of landline callers pay less to call 0845 numbers than geographic numbers. The figure for those who pay no more is higher.
The DWP defence of its use of 0845 is actually based on BT's share of landline provision, which probably gives a lower percentage.
The DWP has reported that around 70% of calls to 0845 numbers have been found to come from landlines. There are a few odd mobile tariffs with lower rates for 0845 calls which could be added in.
This is how one is able to sustain the claim that a majority of callers pay less to call DWP agencies on 0845 numbers.
If someone wants to play around with the statistics and try to use this as the basis for a case then please do so.
As stated above, I SEE THIS AS TOTALLY IRRELEVANT - I would still press the issue if 95% of callers found it cheaper to call a revenue sharing number. One cannot play off one group of public service users against another. If there are potentially conflicting interests to be served, some proper means of resolution has to be found - simple head counting or financial calculation is not satisfactory for reasons that should be obvious. That is why we have a representative democracy, so that elected, and thereby accountable, representatives can make appropriate decisions.
If the DWP or any other public body wants to give some callers the option of benefiting from perverse discounts available from one or more telephone companies, then I have no objection to it offering as many special alternative numbers as it feels that it can, given the need for clear and precise explanation of the circumstances in which these should be used. Its primary numbers may not be subject to revenue sharing. If there are sound reasons for using non-geographic numbers, they must be from the 03xx range.