A Voice from the Eastern Door
When CBC News reported on the black market cellphone industry, it sparked outrage from some readers about price discrepancies across Canada.
Because various cellular plan prices are much cheaper in Manitoba and Saskatchewan — close to half the price —some third-party dealers offer a one-time fee to secretly switch people’s plans in other provinces to the cheaper Prairie deal.
According to the latest report commissioned by the CRTC — the country’s telecom regulator — Canadians still pay some of the highest rates for wireless service in the industrialized world.
But in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Quebec, customers can often score cheaper deals compared to the rest of the country.
CBC News scoped out discount brands Koodo, Fido, and Virgin, owned by Telus, Rogers, and Bell respectively to compare prices.
According to their websites, all charge $48 a month in Saskatchewan and Manitoba for similar plans offering unlimited Canada-wide calling, texting and 5 GB of data.
In most other Canadians provinces, the price for the same deal for all three brands is almost double — between $90 and $95 a month.
The exception is Quebec where customers can get the same plan with one extra GB of data for a cheaper $58 to $60 a month.
The CRTC-commissioned report also clearly shows regional price differences. It looked at six of Canada’s major cities and divided up wireless plans into categories based on included features like data amounts.
For all six categories in 2016, the cheapest deals were in Winnipeg, Regina and Montreal.
The more expensive cellphone packages generally showed the biggest price differences. The top category listed family plans offering unlimited talk, texting, 10 GB of data, and three phone lines. The average price per month was $180 in Winnipeg, $182 in Regina, and $190 in Montreal.
Halifax, Vancouver and Ontario all ranged between $250 and $257 per month — at least 39 per cent higher than the average Winnipeg rate.
Tech analyst Daniel Bader says cell customers in Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Quebec enjoy cheaper rates because those provinces all have a strong regional competitor that can compete with the top three telecom companies: Telus, Rogers and Bell.
In Manitoba, the competitor is Manitoba Telecom Services (MTS). It began as a Crown corporation in the early 1900s and was privatized in 1997.
Saskatchewan has SaskTel, which was also founded in the early 1900s, and remains a Crown corporation.
Bader says the two regional players’ established history and attractive deals make them serious contenders with the big three.
“MTS and SaskTel have just never charged as much for their services as the other telecom companies,” says the senior editor with the tech site Mobile Nations
“Bell, Rogers, Telus coming into a market with an established incumbent, they were forced to undercut those prices and meet the market where it was.”
Quebec also has a strong fourth regional player — Videotron — which launched a province wide wireless business in 2010. Bader says Videotron’s prices undercut the competition, forcing other players to also lower rates.
“Videotron helped bring prices down to a level that the market would be happy to settle at. They’ve been doing that very well to this day.”
Will it last?
Bader says the lower prices offered in Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Quebec make it clear that “we need a strong fourth player in each market” to bring Canadians more affordable wireless service.
But some of the current competition could soon disappear. The Saskatchewan government recently made noises about selling SaskTel.
In Manitoba, Bell has agreed to buy MTS for $3.9 billion. The takeover deal is subject to approval by a number of government agencies.
Many people in the province predict if the deal goes through, it will mean a rise in cell plan prices.
CBC News asked Bell its plans if the deal goes through. It said that its acquisition will include an investment of $1 billion over five years to expand broadband and wireless services in Manitoba.
On the national front, Bader does point to one glimmer of hope, the new kid on the block: Shaw. The telco has the means to become a strong fourth wireless carrier in Canada once it finishes upgrading its wireless network sometime in 2017.
Earlier this year, Shaw snapped up Wind Mobile for $1.6 billion. Wind operates mainly in big cities in Alberta, B.C. and Ontario.
Bader says the telco still faces some hurdles turning Wind into a serious contender. But he believes if Shaw is successful and offers even slightly lower rates, it could spark a price war.
“If their network even smells of being competitive with Bell, Rogers and Telus, people will move over,” he says.
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