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Die ehemals staatlichen Telekommunikationsbetreiber nehmen mehr als die Hälfte der EU-Telekommunikationsmärkte ein – sowohl bei Orts-, Fern- und internationalen Gesprächen. Die Preise sind jedoch, laut der jüngst von der Kommission vorgelegten Daten, tendenziell zurückgegangen.
The latest data
delivered by Eurostat for 2005 indicate that for local calls, the market share of the incumbent operators in the former EU 25 averages 72%. It has reached its peak in small countries, such as Cyprus and Slovenia, where the incumbents control 100% of the national markets. Meanwhile, Austria and Germany recorded the lowest shares for former state-owned operators, who manage 53% and 56% of the national phone calls respectively.
The same pattern emerges for long-distance calls, for which incumbent operators have 66% of the EU market share (the minimum, in Finland, is 45%). Moreover, former state-owned companies manage 56% of international calls (39% in Germany, again the minimum).
On the other hand, the dominance of incumbents does not prevent price decreases. In August 2006, the average charge for a 10-minute call on a weekday morning in the EU 25 was €0.36 for a local connection, €0.74 for a national connection and €1.79 for an international call to the USA (VAT included). The same calls in August 2004
had respectively an average cost of €0.4, €0.9 and €2.1.
In the mobile sector, incumbents' market shares are less remarkable, with an average of 39% registered in 2006 in the EU 25. Incumbents provide less than half of the subscriptions in the vast majority of member states. In the UK, they control 26% of the market, in Denmark 32% and in Poland 34%. On the other hand, in Cyprus, the former state-owned company controls 90% of the mobile market, and in Slovenia 71%.
In terms of prices, EU regulatory intervention has focused on roaming charges
, capped at EU level since summer 2007
. The use of mobile phones abroad now has a maximum charge of €0.30 per minute. In addition, the European Commission launched a wide-ranging review
of the whole telecoms sector in November 2007, following the liberalisation wave of the last two decades (see EurActiv 09/01/2008).
According to the latest Eurostat data for 2004, the EU telecommunications sector is made up of around 24,000 enterprises, with a turnover of €398.6 billion and added value amounting to €187.2 billion. Turnover in the EU 27 grew without interruption between 2001 and 2006, with an average increase of 4.5%. In 2006, the pace of growth slowed substantially to 1.1%.