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Telecom Watchdog Calls For Operator-specific Calling Cards !

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Telecom watchdog calls for operator-specific calling cards

20 Aug, 2008, 1821 hrs IST, PTI

NEW DELHI: Telecom sector watchdog on Wednesday recommended introduction of operator-specific calling cards for both domestic and international long-distance calls.

In its recommendations to the Department of Telecom (DoT), the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) said the move would allow subscribers to choose service providers for both national and international calls.

"Through long distance calling cards, the customer can make long distance calls from telephone of any access provider," TRAI said in a statement.

"A consumer can subscribe to any access provider and still not be dependent on the access provider for long distance calls," it added.

The telecom watchdog also said licence rules for long distance operators be amended to allow them to access customers directly.

TRAI said competition from private operators would lead to more efficient service in the long distance segment, apart from offering choice and affordable prices.

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Does the above mean we can use RCOM's RIC cards (or Voda's WCC card) to make STD/ISD calls from our BSNL landlines? If yes, this will be very good.

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not the same card but similar calling cards will be introduced by all operators which can be used from any phone.

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^^^

Well my dear friends, if the above is going to be implemented, then this will be really great for all users of networks.

Regards.

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Trai recommends choice of operator for STD, ISD calls

Business Standard

Telecom regulator Trai today recommended that National and International Long Distance operators be permitted to offer STD and ISD voice calls using operator-specific calling cards, a move that will give subscribers the freedom to choose a service provider.

In its recommendations to the government, Trai said the provision of calling cards would allow consumer to exercise choice of long distance operator for the national and international calls.

"Through long distance calling cards customer can make long distance calls from telephone of any access provider.... Consumer can subscribe to any access provider and still not be dependent on the access provider for long distance calls," Trai said in a statement.

The Authority has therefore recommended amendment of NLD/ILD operators licence conditions to allow them to access customers directly for national and international long distance calls, respectively.

Competition brought in by carrier selection was considered important for bringing in operational efficiencies in the long distance segment and also in offering choice, quality and affordable prices to the consumers.

Telecom sector was in the process of opening up and availability of carrier selection was considered an important pre-requisite for vibrant competition.

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TRAI's STD move to hit telcos

21 Aug, 2008, 0301 hrs IST, ET Bureau

NEW DELHI: Telecom regulator TRAI’s move to ask the government to give customers the freedom to choose their long-distance carrier for STD and ISD services, coupled with the introduction of internet telephony, is set to impact the bottom lines of all service providers. ET spoke to several telecom analysts and market watchers who were of the view that if DoT were to give a go ahead for both sets of the regulator’s recommendations, it would result in a 33% to 77% fall in telcos’ revenues from long-distance services. About 10-20% of the service providers’ total revenues come from long-distance services.

ET first reported on Wednesday that TRAI would ask the government to give customers the freedom to choose their long-distance carrier (via calling cards) a move that will lead to cheaper tariffs—both STD and ISD. While telcos stand to lose, the consumer will be the biggest beneficiary. Telecom tariffs in India, which are already the lowest in the world, are set to fall further.

“In overall terms, the revenue loss for the telcos may not be much, but it will be significant as long-distance services offer moderately higher margins. These recommendations are the final mail in the coffin and truly rings in the death of distance. Since many service providers already have the long distance infrastructure in place, they may forced to offer flat charges. First, they may have to do away distance based tariff structure. At a later stage, they may even have to do away with duration based charges,” explains Mahesh Uppal, director, Com First (India) and a consultant on regulatory issues in telecom.

“Operators have no choice but lower their long distance tariffs. We are set to move to a system where there is large scale bundling where service providers will provide certain number of local and long distance minutes free. Telcos revenues will not fall from current levels, but their total sales will not increase at the same rates as in the past.

In the long term, India’s telecom stocks may lose some of its shine,” added an analyst with a leading brokerage firm. According to Rohit Prasad, who is a telecoms analyst and a professor at Management Development Institute (MDI), Gurgaon, telcos would try to hit back by using the interconnect regulation in the favor. Currently, all long distance calls involve carriage and termination costs. “In the case of both internet telephony and calling cards, interconnect agreement will be the key to their success,” he added.

As reported earlier by ET, TRAI on Wednesday asked the Department of Telecom to permit all national and international long distance carriers, which include several non-mobile operators such as Gail, Powergrid, RailTel, Sify, Tulip IT, AT&T, British Telecom, France Telecom, Cable and Wireless and Verizon amongst others to market their products directly to the consumer in the from of pre-paid package or through calling cards.

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