New Telegraph

NCC moves to review int’l call termination rate

 

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has embarked on a cost-based study to set the new pricing regime for mobile international termination rate (ITR) for inbound international voice calls in the country.

 

This, the commission said, became imperative to address the current imbalance of payment between Nigerian operators and their foreign counterparts.

 

The ITR is the rate paid to local operators by international operators to terminate calls in Nigeria.

 

As part of the process for the rate determination, the commission recently held a virtual stakeholder engagement forum with relevant industry stakeholders to intimate them with the ongoing cost-based study and the need to cooperate with Messrs Payday Advance and Support Services Limited, the consultants engaged to carry out the study.

 

Addressing the stakeholders in Abuja, the Executive Vice Chairman of NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta, said the study has become imperative following the various implementation constraints arising from contending industry and market dynamics that met previous efforts at finding an optimum price for the termination of international voice services in Nigeria.

 

Danbatta, who was represented at the forum by the Executive Commissioner, Stakeholder Management of NCC, Adeleke Adewolu, said through the new ITR pricing, the commission will be able to balance the competing objectives of economic efficiency and allowing operators the latitude to generate reasonable revenue.

 

The EVC, however, explained that in 2013, the commission issued a determination stating that mobile termination rates (MTR) should be the same irrespective of where the call originated, a clause he said was largely misconstrued by operators at that time to mean that ITR should be the same rate as the MTR.

 

He said this led to operators ignoring the international cost portion, where ITRs were agreed at MTR level without a positive residual to cover the costs of the international leg for lo-cal operators.

 

“As a result of this, the ITRs continued to decline, in line with the MTR glide path and as the ITR was set in naira, it suffered a further downward slide in dollar terms following the currency devaluation.

 

Ironically, the Nigerian operators paid the international operators in dollars to deliver international calls which created an imbalance of payments as the ITR in Nigeria declined,” he said.

 

As a result, Danbatta said Nigerian operators’ profitability and commercial results were negatively affected, putting Nigeria’s ITR below that of most countries with which it makes and receives the most calls, thereby making Nigerian operators perpetual net payers.

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