nicholas43 wrote on Apr 6
th, 2015 at 8:48pm:
Currently, many landline providers include calls to 0845 and 0870 in "unlimited" £x-a-month bundles. Does it follow that there is good commercial justification for setting the universal access charge at 0p per minute?
Alternatively, will a provider be allowed to set the access charge at (say) 15p a minute for only out-of-bundle calls from a landline, while including access charges within the monthly "unlimited" bundle price?
Would readers care to speculate
a. which provider will be the first to declare their access charge, and their stance on bundles?
b. how much the first declared access charge will be?
c. whether BT mean what they say, that they're not declaring theirs till 1 July 2015?
d. whether a "service" charge of, say, 20p a minute means that the "service" provider's telco gets 20p a minute, or 20p less a handling charge of xp a minute?
Callers reasonably expect to pay their telephone provider for calls that they make. The Access Charge should NOT be zero.
BT has been regulated by Ofcom to effectively have a zero Access Charge on calls to 084, 087, 09 and 118 numbers since 1996. That regulation has led to much of the confusion that has been seen with non-geo call costs. The NTS Retail Condition is being scrapped on 1 July 2015.
Calls to 0845 and 0870 numbers should NOT be inclusive. Only those callers who call those numbers should pay the Service Charge. Other callers should not be contributing to those costs.
Ofcom's intention is that 0845 is treated the same as 0843 and 0844 and that 0870 is treated the same as 0871 and 0872. At the consultation stage the project was called 'simplifying non-geographic numbers' and the current publicity campaign goes under the banner 'clear call rates for everyone'.
Despite the expectation that no-one would declare until well into May, or later,
a. Sky was first to declare their Access Charge.
b. 9.5p per minute.
c. time will tell.
d. TCP gets Service Charge less VAT. The non-geographic call handling costs are normally a couple of pence per minute for calls forwarded to a landline and a bit more for calls forwarded to a mobile. The remainder is usually paid out as revenue share or used to discount the service provider's bill for other telecoms services supplied.