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Armenian Phone Fees 'Higher Than In U.S.'

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  • Armenian Phone Fees 'Higher Than In U.S.'

    ARMENIAN PHONE FEES 'HIGHER THAN IN U.S.'
    By Ruben Meloyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 30 2007

    Armenians pay more for fixed-line phone services than residents of
    not only neighboring countries but the United States, according to
    new research presented in Yerevan on Thursday.

    A study conducted by the Armenian Center for National and International
    Studies (ACNIS) found that an Armenian phone subscriber pays an average
    of $38.4 per month, compared with $23 paid by a typical phone user
    in the U.S. The monthly phone bills in Georgia and Azerbaijan average
    $25 and $19 respectively, according to it.

    "Phone expenditures in Armenia make up an average 19.5 percent of
    the average monthly wage," said Ashot Turajian, the main author of
    the study. Americans, by contrast, spend less than one percent of
    their monthly income on fixed-line phone calls, he said.

    In Turajian's words, the ratio is higher in Georgia, at 22 percent,
    only because the official monthly wage there is considerably lower
    than in Armenia. He put the same figure for Azerbaijan at 9 percent.

    The ACNIS study noted that the ArmenTel national telecommunication
    company's fixed monthly fees covering six hours of domestic phone calls
    and per-minute charges levied from subscribers exceeding that limit are
    both higher than similar tariffs set by U.S. fixed-line operators. It
    said that unlike ArmenTel, the latter do not differentiate between
    individual and corporate phone users. Armenian legal entities have
    to pay more for the service than private individuals.

    The cost of the service would have been even higher if the Armenian
    government and state regulators had agreed to all tariff increase
    sought by ArmenTel's current and previous owners. The Russian-owned
    company's most recent attempt to raise its fees was blocked by the
    Public Services Regulatory Commission (PSRC) this summer.

    The ArmenTel management agreed this month to keep the tariffs unchanged
    until next April but indicated that it expects the regulatory body
    to allow it to raise them later in 2008.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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