Telecommunications companies in Nigeria will from September 1, 2022, begin to earn more from calls terminating on their network from outside the country. This came as the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) increased the International Termination Rate (ITR) from $0.045 to $0.10 (10 cents) per minute. NAIRAMETRICS reports.
The new rate, the Commission said, is to be paid in dollars to prevent a situation where the operator will be losing should the devaluation of the Naira continues. In 2021, NCC put the total incoming international calls to the mobile networks at 1.1 trillion (1,153,834,485,182.74) minutes. The ITR was, however, paid in Naira, thus delivering less revenue for the Nigerian telecom operators. Information Guide Nigeria
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In order to ease the remittance of the dollar revenue for the operators, NCC said its meeting with the Central Bank of Nigeria on June 23rd, 2022, has led to the issuance of a new circular by the apex bank to all commercial banks to allow the telecom operators open dedicated accounts in respect of international calls.
The new ITR is coming barely 8 months after the telecom regulator announced $0.045 as the amount to be charged. This took effect from January 1, 2022. With this, NCC said the transit carriers known as International Data Access (IDA) operators are to terminate international calls at a discount of 21% of the $0.10. jamb results
The NCC, in an amended ITR document released on Tuesday, explained the reasons for the increment. It said: “While the Determination had set a floor price at $0.045 and gives the MNOs room to negotiate on commercial terms with carriers, there were related indications that the MNOs took advantage of this latitude to engage in discriminatory pricing that favours their related international carrier partners to the detriment of the Nigerian transit/IDA operators.
“To check the incidence of such anti-competitive disposition, it was agreed by all parties at meetings that a fixed rate should be adopted by the Commission, in place of the floor rate which had provided a platform for negotiations with various carriers at a rate above the floor. It was further agreed that the present Determination should be amended to include this new fixed rate. This position was further underscored by the fact that the floor price of $0.045 while being the lowest in Africa, does not support predictability and monitoring, with a little positive impact on a healthy national balance of payment position.”
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