Post Tagged with: "spectrum"

Canada’s Digital Strategy’s Unasked Questions: Who Leads? Who Pays?

Appeared in the Toronto Star on May 17, 2010 as Digital Strategy's Unasked Questions: Who Leads? Who Pays? Last week Industry Minister Tony Clement unveiled the government’s much-anticipated Digital Economy Strategy consultation.  The consultation is slated to run for two months and includes an online forum, face-to-face meetings, and a […]

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May 17, 2010 1 comment Columns Archive

Industry Canada To Launch Spectrum Auction Consultations

The Wire Report reports on Industry Canada's plans for spectrum auctions in the 700 and 2500 MHz bands

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March 26, 2010 Comments are Disabled News

Broadcaster Plan Involves More Than Just Fee-For-Carriage

Appeared in the Toronto Star on November 23, 2009 as Broadcasters Want More Than Fee For Carriage In the weeks leading to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission hearing on broadcasting licences, Canadians were inundated with splashy advertising campaigns claiming that new fees for local signals were either a TV […]

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November 23, 2009 2 comments Columns Archive

Canadian Telco Ownership Rules From By-Gone Era

Appeared in the Toronto Star on November 16, 2009 as Telco Ownership Rules From Bygone Era Corporate structures and loan agreements are rarely the stuff of public interest, yet last month they attracted considerable attention in a case involving Globalive, a new wireless company vying to shake up Canada’s telecommunications […]

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November 16, 2009 Comments are Disabled Columns Archive

Why Canada Lags on Wireless

Where does Canada stand with respect to the cost of wireless services?  That question recently generated a spirited debate when the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development released new figures that ranked it as the third most expensive developed country. Critics pounced on the report, calling the results ridiculous and pointing to perceived flaws in the methodology.

Given that consumers have a hard time making sense of the different plans, options, and hidden fees offered by Canada’s big three wireless providers (Rogers, Bell, and Telus), it should come as little surprise that comparisons of wireless services across dozens of countries is exceptionally difficult.  Some countries charge consumers for both incoming and outgoing calls, while many others do not. Moreover, hidden charges such as Canada’s system access fee – which can add as much as 25 percent to a monthly bill – are often excluded from cost calculations.

While the debate will continue to rage, few currently hold Canada up as a model of wireless leadership.  If not pricing, what should policy makers and politicians be focusing on?  My weekly technology column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) argues that four main issues come to mind.

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August 25, 2009 14 comments Columns