New metering plan to cut cost of phone calls
Miko L. Morelos
Philippine Daily Inquirer
July 24, 2009
MANILA, Philippines — The National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) has directed cellular phone companies to lower the pulse metering rate from 60 seconds to 6 seconds.
The pulse metering rate is the length of time calls are metered or charged by.
Currently, telecommunications companies charge users around P8 per pulse, which consists of 60 seconds. This is known as per-minute charging.
In a memorandum signed Thursday, the commission ordered the rate adjusted to 10 percent of what it currently charges.
Commissioner Ruel Canobas said this is expected to cut call charges to the benefit of mobile phone users.
“This will be a big help to them because it will further bring down call rates,” Canobas told the Inquirer in an interview.
Telcos have been given four months to implement the new rates because the companies have to make some changes to their systems, Canobas said.
“[The stakeholders] agreed four months is sufficient for the transition,” the commissioner said.
The public can expect the memorandum to take full effect by year’s end, he added.
Canobas said he could not yet say by how much call charges would go down.
The order, he said, mandates telcos to submit within 30 days their proposed rates based on a 6-second per pulse charge.
The order also gives the firms another 30 days to amend their interconnection agreements “to incorporate the prescribed unit of billing.”
The new rate, however, does not phase out the per-minute charging scheme. Subscribers can still choose to be charged by the minute or opt for unlimited service offerings, the memorandum said.
International calls are not covered by the regulation, it said.