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FILIPINOS are sending more text messages every day, but
now spend less every month on mobile phone use,
Catanduanes Rep. Joseph Santiago, chairman of the House
Committee on Information and Communications technology,
said Monday.
Santiago
said Filipinos spent anywhere from P293 to P148 monthly
for mobile telephone services, mainly text messages, in
the first half of this year. This is 10 percent to 30
percent lower than what they spent monthly over the same
period in 2007.
Santiago, former chief of the National
Telecommunications Commission, based his figures on the
monthly average revenue per unit (ARPU) reported by the
country’s three leading mobile telephone service
providers in the six months to June this year.
In
regulatory filings, Philippine Long Distance Telephone
Co. (PLDT) reported that subsidiary Smart Communications
Inc. generated a monthly ARPU of P293 in the first
semester, down 10 percent from P324 in the same period
last year.
Sister
firm Pilipino Telephone Corp. (Piltel), which caters to
lower-income users, had a monthly ARPU of P203 in the
first semester, down 12 percent from P230 over the same
period in 2007.
Meanwhile, PLDT rival Globe Telecom Inc. posted a
monthly ARPU of P283, a decline of 19 percent from P349
a year ago.
Globe’s
TM brand, the counterpart of Piltel’s Talk and Text,
yielded a monthly ARPU of P148, lower by 31 percent from
P216 a year ago.
Santiago
attributed the decline in the monthly ARPUs to
double-digit inflation, particularly food price
inflation, which he said has forced many subscribers to
spend less on mobile telephone “loads.” He noted that
around 99 percent of all mobile telephone users are
prepaid subscribers that buy airtime and text load as
needed.
“Filipinos are definitely spending less on mobile
telephone services to make up for increased spending for
other needs, primarily for food, electricity and
transportation services,” Santiago said.
Despite
the drop in spending, Santiago said Filipinos are
actually sending more text messages every day.
“The
combined traffic figures of Smart and Piltel indicate
that their subscribers, on average, send around 23 text
messages every day,” Santiago said.
Smart
and Piltel reported an aggregate volume of 121.35
billion text messages in the first semester, up 5
percent or 6.29 billion from the 115.07 billion logged
in the same period in 2007.
Globe
did not report its text message volume in its filings.
Notwithstanding the decline in the reported monthly
ARPUs, Santiago said telecommunication service providers
apparently managed to increase their revenues via
“bucket” or promotional campaigns that tend to stimulate
consumption, and by enlisting more users.
Smart
and Piltel reported a total of 33.2 million subscribers
as of end-June 2008, up 23 percent or 6.1 million from
27.1 million in the same period in 2007.
Globe
reported a total of 22.7 million subscribers as of
end-June, up 25 percent or 4.6 million from 18.1 million
a year ago. |