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Maximum 33 cent per minute for calls within the Country visited
Maximum 50 cents per minute for calls to your home country Maximum 16 cents for incoming calls Not bad, is it? Implementation by the summer 2007 Quote:
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I think those are the WHOLESALE prices. Retail may be 30% higher.
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Not bad, I just saw an interview with her on CNN International. She sure had a solid plan, I hope it gets implemented to some degree since most providers won't go along with every part of her proposal.
http://www.cnn.com/2006/BUSINESS/07/12/eu....reut/index.html |
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I did indeed misread the article.
From teltarif today: 'Demnach w?rde ein ankommendes Gespr?ch im Ausland momentan f?r den Endkunden 16,5 Cent pro Minute kosten. Telefonate innerhalb des Auslands k?men auf h?chstens 33 Cent pro Minute und Telefonate aus dem Ausland ins Heimatland oder ein drittes Land w?rden auf maximal 49 Cent pro Minute festgelegt. Der Endkundenzuschlag von 30 Prozent ist hier den Unterlagen zufolge bereits eingerechnet. Unklar ist jedoch, ob an dieser Stelle noch eine anfallende Umsatzsteuer aufgeschlagen werden d?rfte." 33 49 16.5 According to tt.... you are correct that these are retail prices INCLUDING the 30%. TT says it is unclear if the VAT is included or not in those prices. Anyway it does not seem that this will happend anytime soon so our international cards will still be of use. Wonder if THEY will be forced to conform to these rates? I suppose if they are EU countries of origin, the will. CH is not, but they don't have a horse in the race. Stan |
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Looking from a non EU country I still see some advantages of international cards such as UM or Travelsim: they allow free incoming calls with the outgoing tariff similar to the rates quoted in the beginning of this topic. Thus, for us (outlanders :) ) it will be always better to pick an international card than a EU 'normal' card. The advantage for EU citizens is that they will be able to keep their number paying few money for incoming calls (which is often more reasonable than forcing your friends or relatives to call for 20-40 cents/min or more a foreign mobile number that your international card has). So, international cards will be existing for the rest of the world, at least.
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"Operators are likely to mount a legal challenge ..."
http://www.mobiletoday.co.uk/content...sp?men=2&sub=6 O2 cut European roaming rates to 35p, 50c - how many of us believe this would have spontaneously happened due to competition, rather than the threat of EU intervention? And what about those various senior executives in certain networks that have agreed roaming charges are unfair - will they be forced to send their CVs around? |
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