Title : Singapore, Malaysia to reduce mobile roaming rates from May 1
Date : 20 April 2011 1534 hrs (SST)
URL : http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/123888/1/.html
SINGAPORE: Singapore and Malaysia will gradually reduce mobile roaming charges between both countries from May 1.
This means mobile phone users in Singapore will pay up to 30 per cent less for voice calls and up to 50 per cent less for SMSes when in Malaysia.
This is according to the Infocomm Development Authority (IDA), which added that it will be cheaper to call and SMS across the causeway.
IDA's director general, Leong Keng Thai said: "When Singaporean consumers travel to Malaysia, they will have a lower bill, or they can make more calls; longer calls, send more smses, without having to worry about high roaming charges."
He added that traditionally, roaming charges have been high and there is even more room for it to be lowered.
The reduction came about after a meeting of ASEAN's Information and Telecommunication Ministers in 2008, where they agree to initiate a study on intra-ASEAN roaming changes.
IDA said the new price reductions will be implemented in two phases.
From May this year, incoming and outgoing voice calls will be cheaper by 20 per cent, and in total will be cheaper by 30 per cent in May next year.
Similarly, SMSes will be cheaper by 30 per cent in May this year, and up to 50 per cent in May next year.
Analysts say consumers generally welcome the move and can look forward to other reductions with ASEAN countries; whom IDA are in talks with.
However, for mobile operators, the lowered roaming charges mean they will be seeing a loss in both retail takings and also from inter-operator tariffs.
Research house Synovate has also released a study, saying most retail roaming charges in Asean are significantly higher than local substitutes for calling home, which it attributed to high inter-operator tariffs.
Such tariffs are a wholesale amount payable by a mobile operator to another when they use their network - for example, when SingTel make use of Malaysia's Celcom's network for their subscribers to make calls or SMSes.
But, IDA's Mr Leong said, "Of course there is a reduction in terms of retail revenue for the operators, but we believe that when consumers find it more competitive to use roaming services, they might generate more traffic in terms of more calls or longer calls whenever they go to Malaysia and vice versa when Malaysians come to Singapore."
Meanwhile, for data roaming charges, IDA said Singapore and Malaysia are still in discussion, while not revealing a timeline.
The government body added that the charging formula for data roaming is more complex than voice and SMS rates and the details need to be iron out.
But if it comes through, it means consumers can tweet across the causeway in the future.
Malaysia is the biggest roaming market for Singaporeans, with bilateral talktime back and froth between both countries amounting to 100 million minutes in 2008.
- AFP/fa
Date : 20 April 2011 1534 hrs (SST)
URL : http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/123888/1/.html
SINGAPORE: Singapore and Malaysia will gradually reduce mobile roaming charges between both countries from May 1.
This means mobile phone users in Singapore will pay up to 30 per cent less for voice calls and up to 50 per cent less for SMSes when in Malaysia.
This is according to the Infocomm Development Authority (IDA), which added that it will be cheaper to call and SMS across the causeway.
IDA's director general, Leong Keng Thai said: "When Singaporean consumers travel to Malaysia, they will have a lower bill, or they can make more calls; longer calls, send more smses, without having to worry about high roaming charges."
He added that traditionally, roaming charges have been high and there is even more room for it to be lowered.
The reduction came about after a meeting of ASEAN's Information and Telecommunication Ministers in 2008, where they agree to initiate a study on intra-ASEAN roaming changes.
IDA said the new price reductions will be implemented in two phases.
From May this year, incoming and outgoing voice calls will be cheaper by 20 per cent, and in total will be cheaper by 30 per cent in May next year.
Similarly, SMSes will be cheaper by 30 per cent in May this year, and up to 50 per cent in May next year.
Analysts say consumers generally welcome the move and can look forward to other reductions with ASEAN countries; whom IDA are in talks with.
However, for mobile operators, the lowered roaming charges mean they will be seeing a loss in both retail takings and also from inter-operator tariffs.
Research house Synovate has also released a study, saying most retail roaming charges in Asean are significantly higher than local substitutes for calling home, which it attributed to high inter-operator tariffs.
Such tariffs are a wholesale amount payable by a mobile operator to another when they use their network - for example, when SingTel make use of Malaysia's Celcom's network for their subscribers to make calls or SMSes.
But, IDA's Mr Leong said, "Of course there is a reduction in terms of retail revenue for the operators, but we believe that when consumers find it more competitive to use roaming services, they might generate more traffic in terms of more calls or longer calls whenever they go to Malaysia and vice versa when Malaysians come to Singapore."
Meanwhile, for data roaming charges, IDA said Singapore and Malaysia are still in discussion, while not revealing a timeline.
The government body added that the charging formula for data roaming is more complex than voice and SMS rates and the details need to be iron out.
But if it comes through, it means consumers can tweet across the causeway in the future.
Malaysia is the biggest roaming market for Singaporeans, with bilateral talktime back and froth between both countries amounting to 100 million minutes in 2008.
- AFP/fa