bazzerfewi wrote on Feb 4
th, 2011 at 11:10pm:
I to appose 0845 numbers in their present format but in the same token wouldn't including 0845 numbers be a good move because it wouldn't be any more expensive for the caller to ring them
I am not up to speed with the regulation but why wouldn't it be better if it didn't cost any more to call 0845 than 01 02 or 03 numbers
Also the other issue is that callers do not understand appreciate the difference between the numbers
I appreciate any guidance on this issue
I'm just catching up with recent postings. Having read the comments on what it is that Virgin Media is offering, I don't think it is quite what it first appeared to be which is an inclusive package with 01, 02, 03 and 0845 numbers (I may be wrong). I understand that the 0845 inclusivity is an add-on.
Anyway, to explain the reasoning for my opposition of making 0845 inclusive (in its current form):
Firstly, a telephone call should be considered as being two parties, each served by a different telephone company. So the call passes the boundary (shown below as
[X]
) between two telephone companies:
Caller ----- <Caller's telco>
[X]
<Receiver's telco> ----- Receiver
So Caller places a call to the Receiver and in order for the call to be connected, the Caller's telco must pass the call to the Receiver's telco which connects it to its customer (the Receiver). It stands to reason that the call cannot be connected other than with the service of the Receiver's telco.
For the call to pass
[X]
, the Receiver's telco levies a fee on the Caller's telco. It's a bit like a toll for the call to continue on its journey.
The "normal" toll is that incurred for a geographic or 03 call, but the toll for a 0845 number carries a premium.
It stands to reason that as a premium product, 0845 will have a higher retail price (i.e. higher call cost). So bringing it down to the same as a "normal" call (as is the case with a tariff that includes 01/02/03
and 0845 calls), would leave the call providing telco to recoup the premium from its customers in general.
That is, the likely effect is that prices for all its customers will rise. And of course the other effect which SilentCallsVictim touched on (reply #21) is that the more this happened, the more it would be seen as acceptable get a 0845 number because any individual caller wouldn't pay more and so in turn more calls would be made and prices would rise even more. This is why I say that including 0845 numbers in packages should be opposed.
On the other hand, if this is an add-on, say £2 per month for lots of 0845 calls, then that is not the same.