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Americans Phone More at Lower Prices!

The European and American cell phone markets present two key differences. In Europe, GSM (2nd generation) and UMTS (3rd generation) are the two sole standards, while in the United-States, competition between standards is a de facto, especially between GSM and CDMA. The second key difference lies in tariffs. In the United-States, the «Receiving Party Pays» applies; the called party pays the call termination received on his/her cell phone. In Europe, the caller pays for the call ( «Calling Party Pays»).

Graph 1 : Mobile penetration rate in the population and prepaid share in the overall client base in 2006

Mobile penetration rate in the population and prepaid share in the overall client base in 2006

In the United-States, cell phone penetration appears below European levels. In the United-States, SIM card penetration at end-2006 in the overall population totaled 78%, much lower than the average European penetration rate of 109%; Italy even announces a 138%penetration rate. Moreover, the US market posted a 9% cell phone take-up between 2005 and 2006 versus 8% over the same period in Europe. The prepaid market accounts for close to 87% of active SIM cards in Italy. Given this context, the number of people who concomitantly own at least 2 active SIM cards is very high and contributes to « boost » the penetration rate. The proportion of prepaid cards in the subscriber base is much lower in the United States, where it does not represent more than 15% of the base, versus Europe's average 59%.

American market dynamics have favored (postpaid) calling plans, appealing to consumers with deep pockets and heavy phone use. In Europe, France shares characteristics of the US markets: a low penetration rate, with a small number of prepaid plans. Across Europe, the dual SIM card holder reflects cell phone marketing pushing prepaid plans. In short, America's cell phone penetration mirrors Europe's. Penetration rates can, therefore, be defined as individuals having access to and regularly using a cell phone within the overall population.

Amazing! Americans call four times more than Europeans! An American cell phone subscriber averages 833 minutes (outbound and inbound), whereas in Europe, average consumption across the same perimeter totaled a mere 176 minutes, with Finnish consumption totaling an average 315 mn/habitant/month1.

Graph 2 : Average consumption per inhabitant vs price per minute2 in 2006

Average consumption per inhabitant vs price per minute in 2006

In 2006, European users averaged 45 SMS/per SIM card/per month with major differences between the countries. In 2006, Denmark posted an average 158 SMS/subscriber/month versus 27 SMS for France.

In the United States, interconnection between operators for SMS messages has been effective since April 2002. The number of SMS messages exchanged between subscribers has grown quite rapidly, from 0.25 in 2001 to nearly 39 SMS in 2006.


Graph 3 :2006 EBITDA margin and revenue growth 2005- 2006

2006 EBITDA margin and revenue growth 2005- 2006

Vodafone EU 15: Germany, Spain, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, United Kingdom

Orange EU 15: Belgium, Spain, France, Netherlands, United Kingdom

Telefonica EU 15: Germany, Spain, Ireland, Italy, United Kingdom

T Mobile EU 15: Germany, Austria, Netherlands, United Kingdom


The price of a cell phone minute in the USA is much lower than in Europe, or 5 ct$/mn versus 17. Compared to France, where prices are deemed competitive, price per minute is three times less, and five times less than Germany where prices are relatively high.

The American market counts some 180 telecoms operators and more than 60 MVNOs. But, with mergers between AT&T, Cingular and BellSouth in 2004, followed by Sprint with Nextel in 2005, the American market has furthered consolidation around four operators. Today, these four operators control 85% of the market. While two operators use the GSM standard (AT&T/Cingular and T-Mobile USA), the other two operators apply the CDMA standard (Verizon and Sprint/Nextel). The four key American operators, akin to Europe's top four cell phone companies, post EBITDA margins averaging 33%. In 2006, the American cell phone companies grossed higher revenues on their domestic market than their European counterparts. This difference can be attributed to external growth operations which the European operators have carried outside of Europe.

In 2007, Verizon acquired 3 regional operators. Sprint, recently purchased a local cell phone company local, and
AT&T‘s acquisition of Dobson is awaiting approval by the FCC. Moreover, fixed-cell phone-Internet convergence is speeding up mergers amongst operators, and contributing to the overall consolidation of the American telecommunications market.


Graph 4: Cumulated market shares of the leading two operators HHI index

Cumulated market shares of the leading two operators HHI index

The current cell phone consolidation taking place in America is, however, limited compared to the number of national markets across Europe (see Figure 4).

First, the United States is nearing the United Kingdom in terms of cumulated market shares held by the leading two cell phone operators. Indeed, both countries post 52%, while in both France and Finland the two leading operators have a combined share of 80% of the market. Further, in the United States the HHI1 concentration index is less than in Europe.

Generally speaking, the American cell phone market is more competitive than most European countries. American competition level stems from its license granting process, which created a high number of small cell companies, operating either on a local or regional basis. More, the 60 MVNOs have reinforced the diversity of the offer. In 2006, MVNOs counted more than 16 million subscribers, representing close to 7% of the subscriber base. Two MVNOs dominate: TracFone, a subsidiary of America Movil, targeting the Hispanic community and Virgin Mobile, a joint-venture between Virgin Group and Sprint Nextel targeting the youth market, and mirroring Virgin's target in Europe---which has been successful.


Voice consumption for Europe was calculated using the American method which includes calls received.

Price per minute was calculated by divding Voice ARPU by average consumption per subscriber which is expressed in minutes.


Quantifica
is an independent information and telecommunications research and quantitative market research firm. It is headquartered in Paris, France. It was known as Omsyc (World Observatory of Communication Systems) until 2008. Quantifica has many clients worldwide, and they include other consulting companies as well as telecommunications operators, regulators and equipment manufacturers. Its database currently counts more than 247 000 data items and 1 500 variables.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com


Am I being scammed by First Resolution Investment Corporation?
Why is First Resolution Investment Corp. threatening to attach my pay for a "questionable" debt from 1988? I had an account in 1988 with "First Card" and have no reason to believe the balance has not been satisfied. I actually had a lawyer send me a letter threatening to garnish my pay. This account has never been to collections, nor on my credit report. My husband called to attempt to settle, since this is something we want to diffuse asap and have no idea because it was so long ago. After I contacted them to follow-up, they had no record of the offer. The more I question the validity, I realize I have not received any certified letters. Just a plain tacky looking piece of paper looking like my name was "inserted" - which leads me to believe that the lawyers are either trying to scam me, or have never studied the SOL section to pass their bar exam. This is 23 YEARS ago. I am searching the internet and this is almost unheard of. The lawyers office sending me this "settlement offer" is legit according to google. I am going to drive by tomorrow since it is not far from my home. They have a local phone number and the same number on the letter is on the web. So if the lawyers office is legit, why are they trying to collect something 23 years old? Shouldn't they be smarter than that not to waste their time? I have so many questions now. Am I being scammed because someone found out I had a credit card back in the 80's? Why wasn't my personal information shredded or burned after 10-15 years? First Card was dissolved, I believe bought out by BankOne, and further by JP Morgan Chase. Wouldn't this have been written off as bad debt? If this in fact had never been paid, who dropped the ball on this and why have I never heard from them until now? My address has never changed. Thank you!

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Do you think we will achieve the economy of star trek some day?
I've been thinking about this a lot lately. In star trek the economy is based on utilitarian participation in some kind of common place work force, where we all 'work together for the betterment of humanity'. I have spoken with people who say this will never happen because of the 'inherent greed of the human race'. I don't think we are all inherently greedy. I think the level of greed we see today is a learned trait, based on my psychological education. But that is another conversation entirely. The way I see it, we are incrementally evolving toward an economy where more and more things will become 'free'. Already look at how much cost has gone down for basic mediums of entertainment. Once upon a time you had no choice but to pay 70$ a month for overpriced, limited cable broadcasting. Now you pay 10$ a month and can watch almost anything you want, whenever you want, as many times as you want, on netflix. You use to have to pay 50$ a month for local phone service. Now you can pay 20$ a year for digital phone service (magic jack) and there are also free alternatives. Plus cell phone service plans are going down (see virgin mobile). Music is another thing that is easily acquired for next to nothing, and you can get it at your own pace, song by song. Consuming it as you see fit, rather than what some corporate sponsored radiostation sees fit. You once had to spend hundreds of dollars for a decent vitamin/supplement regimen. Now you can log into swanson or vitacost and get months worth of the same supplments for way less than a hundred dollars. The reason I am mentioning all this is because the reason price is going down is that demand is either dropping because of widespread availability of many of these commodities or luxuries or a lot of these companies cannot compete with free sources, so they try their best to present them in such a way that it appeals to a prospective buyer. What is this all leading to? An economy where everything is free, as long as you participate in the economy? Well, one might exclaim. 'that would never work because given the option people would rather lay around and have everything handed to them'. ^^^ So by the above logic, money is the only worthy incentive? I have to heartily disagree with this sentiment. Basically it is illogical. It presupposes that 1-People would have nothing to 'work for' if currency were removed from the equation and 2-That there are no other viable incentives. I disagree 1000% with people who think this way. If people slave 40, 50, 60 hours a week just for basic necessities, food, shelter, living costs etc, to barely be able to make ends meet, what do you think they would do if the incentive was the betterment not only of humankind, but, consequently, their own lives? I think at first people would see the selfish aspect of this approach, but soon, in a matter of two or three generations, they would realize the big picture, as it were. That is, that the betterment of the human race is the primary goal, because no one lives in a vacuum and therefor, we cannot better ourselves fully without bettering our species and vice versa! A feedback loop of mutual necessity! After all, is that not what the current economy is based on, albeit in a very lop sided fashion that favors consumerism and impersonal deterministic forces (being controlled by what other's want, instead of what thy self wants)? Also, I do not buy the notion that 'competition' is solely responsible for innovation, especially where advances in physics or biology are concerned. On the contrary a concerted effort is what usually gets the job done (think the human genome project, for example)! And after all, if humans can invent so much fighting against one another, imagine how much they can invent working with one another! So, what does everyone else think? I am pretty convinced that notions of eternal greed are just way out of proportion and generally the domain of cynics who, because they are so ingrained in todays economics, they cannot see past their own noses on this matter!

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Why do some local phone numbers have +1 before the area code?
+13153743413

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