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Who pays the lost revenue (Read 6,954 times)
David_H
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Who pays the lost revenue
Jun 30th, 2011 at 6:06pm
 
Now that BT call packages and now a couple on Virgin don't charge for 0845 calls who pays the companies using them the 2p or more a minute they are contracted to receive?
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Dave
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Re: Who pays the lost revenue
Reply #1 - Jun 30th, 2011 at 6:07pm
 
The customers (in general) of the said telephone companies.
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David_H
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Re: Who pays the lost revenue
Reply #2 - Jul 7th, 2011 at 12:52am
 
I wasn't meaning the telephone companies as they do raise other prices when some go down, but the companies who own 0845 numbers and bought them on the expectation that every call would net them a few p. Unless BT pay them anyway and get the money from higher charges for daytime calls and monthly rental etc, which is robbing Peter to pay Paul via Brian and some of his neighbours, and possibly even an offshore account? Complex to say the least.

I've asked this before but while I'm on that track when the call went up to ban 0870 numbers, before it even happened all firms did was switch to 0844 (which cost even more on Virgin) no doubt at great cost to change the switchboards, letterheads and websites etc, continue to charge people to call them and the customers gain diddly-squat. It's no different from telling thieves they can only steal on Mondays, they're doing exactly the same thing so why simply allow firms to keep switching numbers, either they could stick with 0870 and accept the government are happy to allow it, or say it's immoral and obnoxious and stop it. Just letting them use another number to do the same thing is the sort of thing that ought to only happen in bad jokes.

And of course there are still 0870 numbers so we are no further than we were a few years ago when this debate began in earnest.
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SilentCallsVictim
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Re: Who pays the lost revenue
Reply #3 - Jul 8th, 2011 at 4:01am
 
Some interesting comments from my near namesake.

Although many went from 0870 to 0844, the removal of revenue share from 0870 did cause some to see the light - the BBC and the DVLA stand out. There is also increasing public awareness of the scandal of 084 numbers, for which credit is due to the efforts of all those who press this issue. We have not won, but we are making some progress.

The present situation with BT and 0845 is complex, although Ofcom proposes to lift the regulations that cause this mess (and that with 0844 etc.) shortly. It also proposes to deal more effectively with the 0870 situation using the greater powers that it will receive shortly.

BT's inclusion of 0845 in packages was made in the expectation of a different change to regulations, so it is even more messy. In theory BT can only fund the revenue share passed on for 0845 calls from its call charges and package fees, and furthermore it cannot make any margin - it can only cover its direct costs. Because it has to make a margin somehow to cover its overheads (marketing, billing etc.) this has to come from other sources of revenue. This means that those who perhaps refuse to call 0845 numbers on a point of principle are paying for them anyway through other BT charges.

For those, e.g. Talk Talk, who attempt to copy BT tariffs, they are more directly subsidising some calls with the revenue from others. This is nothing particularly odd; it occurs with every business to some extent.

Because money, by its very nature, is totally exchangeable one cannot truly say who is paying for anything that is done by a business. Money comes in and money goes out. It is however perfectly fair to answer the question in the way that Dave does, especially for BT because it is regulated in this respect.

Dave offers the fairest answer, however some fool could say that it is telephone company staff who pay, because they could have better wages if the revenue share did not have to be paid on. Grin
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Dave
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Re: Who pays the lost revenue
Reply #4 - Jul 8th, 2011 at 1:26pm
 
Looking at this simply from the point of view of what callers pay leads to classic misinterpretations of the situation.

We have a free market in telecommunications services where, not only can we subscribe to services from any one number of operators, but that we can call all customers connected to all other operators.

To help understand what’s going on, picture the receiver’s provider first. Customers of all other telephone companies must be able to call this party. What happens is that they act as retailers of calls for the receiver’s telco.

Let’s use an example which you’re probably familiar with. Take your mobile phone operator (in this example I’ll refer to Vodafone). Customers connected to landline and other mobile operators must be able ring you and in order to do that they must connect to Vodafone’s network. Thus, other telephone companies act as retailers for calls to Vodafone customers in just the same way as the supermarkets act as retailers for Kelloggs’ products.

In this example, I talked about your mobile provider. The same is true of any fixed or mobile provider, so you could substitute “Vodafone” with your landline provider.

In order for these call retailers (originating telephone companies) to be able to connect a call to the receiver’s provider, they must pay them a termination charge (usually ‘per minute’). This is like the “wholesale” cost of the call. Termination charges vary by number type (e.g. 0845, 0844).

So the termination payments are outgoings on a call provider’s balance sheet and its call charges are incomings. Just because retail call charges have been reduced doesn’t mean that termination payments have been.

Indeed, if call retailers could reduce termination payments so as to reduce the call charges, (whilst not reducing retentions) clearly they would do so. But to receivers’ telcos, termination charges are income, so they aren’t going to reduce them because there’s no benefit to them for doing so.

How does this relate to numbers that carry a premium to the user?

The termination charges for 0845, 0844/3, 0871/2/3 and 09 numbers are greater than those associated with “normal” 01/02/03 numbers. These are the premiums passed to receivers.

The effects on caller’s and receiver’s providers are as follows:
  • Caller’s provider incurs greater outgoing, so there is a pressure for call charges to be higher; or some call providers choose to offset the loss in retention elsewhere (more on that below under “The position of BT”).
  • Receiver’s provider gets a greater income, so there is pressure for it to charge its client (the receiver) less. And in some cases they give cashback (revenue payments) to their customer.

So, to answer the question posed in the first posting; where a caller’s provider chooses to include 0845 calls in packages, it still incurs the enhanced termination charges just as before, making no change to the receiver’s subsidy. Inclusive 0845 calls are like a loss leader. Thus, it’s fair to say that call providers that do this will be likely to recoup their costs from customers in general.

The position of BT (as call retailer)

With BT (when it acts as the originator), its retention on 0845, 0844/3, 0871/2/3 and 09 calls is limited to a tiny tiny amount (perhaps negligible for the purposes of our discussion) by the “NTS Condition” regulation. So BT’s retail call charges are pretty much equal to the termination charges it incurs.

Thus, the cost (loss of income less outgoings) to it to include these numbers in packages is much lower than with other providers. BT’s loss of income is simply the termination payments it makes (and the tiny tiny regulated retention), whereas other providers would loose the termination payments plus their retentions.

Due to BT’s abnormally low call rates for these numbers, other providers (notably TalkTalk) copy BT (due to competitive pressures) by offsetting their costs elsewhere. That is, TalkTalk chooses to include 0845 calls in packages, thus forgoing retention on these calls as well as revenue to cover termination payments.

Providers like Virgin Media and the mobile operators all charge more for these numbers.

What about 0870 numbers?

You may have noticed that up to press, I’ve not talked about 0870 numbers.

This is because in August 2009 the termination charges for them were brought into line with normal 01/02/03 numbers. Thus, receivers now get no benefit from their use.

But, unlike with 03 numbers, there is no rule that says retail prices must be the same as geographic calls.

Many call providers choose to charge their customers premiums to ring them. In such cases it is the originating telco which the caller subscribes to that is keeping the inflated charges.

This effectively kills the 0870 range, particularly with respect to new users. Many callers pay more to ring with no benefit to number users (receivers). If they don’t wish to seek benefit (but use non-geographic numbers), then they can use 03 numbers as no caller will pay more.


Please forgive my simple economics (and perhaps sometimes incorrect) language here; my understanding of economics is much less than that of telecoms! I hope that the explanation gives an insight as to the function and interaction of the different parties during calls.
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David_H
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Re: Who pays the lost revenue
Reply #5 - Jul 8th, 2011 at 4:27pm
 
Yes, I get it now. BT pay the number owners themselves instead of us and use us to subsidise them with higher charges overall.

My solution for termination charges is radical but simple- possibly a single national telephone company? What does anyone think? It would certainly solve nearly all the above problems, plus remove revenue sharing altogether with a little new regulation. Brings back memories somewhere but struggling to know exactly where from...
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Global warming is the new religion of the century. Be original and be an atheist.
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