SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : 3Com Corporation (COMS) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mang Cheng who wrote (28301)3/1/1999 10:43:00 AM
From: Moonray  Respond to of 45548
 
China rings in lower telephone, Internet fees
Reuters - Posted at 6:31 a.m. PST Monday, March 1, 1999

SHANGHAI, March 1 (Reuters) - China rang in lower telephone
and Internet charges on Monday in a bid to deflect complaints
about high rates as Beijing tries to make its telecommunications
sector more market-oriented, industry officials said.

China's Ministry of Information Industry said on Sunday it would
slash fees for fast-growing Internet use by about 50 percent and
international telephone rates by as much as 18 percent.

But postage rates would rise by 20-60 percent as China tried to end
the practice of having lucrative telecommunications services
subsidise money-losing postal operations, it said.

''There have been too many complaints from customers, so the
areas they're reducing are the price of long-distance telephone calls
from China to overseas and Internet fees,'' said an executive at a foreign telecommunications firm
in Shanghai.

''I think they're intending to make things more competitive and more market-oriented,'' she said.

The cut in fees was tied to moves to respond to market trends, including a plan to split up state
telecommunications giant China Telecom, industry officials said.

Beijing is close to splitting China Telecom, the main operating company for telecommuniations
services, into separate entities handling fixed line, mobile phone and paging businesses, they said.

China would also cut charges on fixed telephone installation and opening mobile telephone lines,
abolish administrative fees on local telephone call networks and cut fees levied on long-distance
telephone calls, the Xinhua news agency said.

Individuals using the Internet would pay four yuan ($0.48) per hour for the first 60 hours in a
month and eight yuan for every additional hour, the official agency said.

''Most of the research institutes and universities are interested in using the Internet for education
or assisting their research work,'' one industry official said. ''But they're the poorest and they
cannot afford the current price.''

Internet-related companies welcomed the move, saying it would increase business. China was
estimated to have more than two million Internet users at the end of 1998.

''We of course welcome the cut,'' said an official from SINA, which provides content and
services through its Chinese language web site. ''For our company, it will bring more users.''

A spokesman for U.S. company Intel Corp, the world's largest computer chip maker, said it had
lobbied Beijing to lower rates for Internet users.

''A country needs to embrace the Internet if the nation wants to be competitive,'' he said by
telephone from Beijing.

''One of the barriers from the development of the Internet is higher cost, so this is good news and
we believe that this will further foster use of the Internet in China.''

The cuts were also good for telecommunications equipment producers as it could increase sales,
though the benefits were offset by low profit margins in China, analysts said.

This ought to help 3COM sell modems, eh?

o~~~ O