Internet users in Australia are being forced to pay some of the world’s highest prices for basic broadband connections, new research has revealed.
Australia is the fourth-most expensive country in the world for a standard 100Mbps broadband plan, data compiled by discount site Picodi shows.
The average cost of a 100Mbps in Australia is $94.88, the data shows, with only Norway ($100.11), Iceland ($100.90), and South Africa ($127.48) having pricier plans.
Across the ditch, New Zealand internet users pay an average of $83.20 for a 100Mbps plan, while those in the US pay $73.06, and $64.23 in the United Kingdom.
By contrast, internet users in China pay an average of just $16.83 for 100Mbps plans.
Broadband internet is cheapest in Moldova, Russia, and Ukraine, with consumers paying an average of $14.12, $11.22, and $9.04 respectively for 100Mbps plans, the data showed.
The findings follow rankings compiled by the Commonwealth Parliamentary Library released in August showing that Australia places last when it comes to broadband affordability in 36 OECD nations.
When it comes to super-fast internet
download speeds of 1Gbps – Australia is the most expensive country in the world – plans cost an average of $321.50.
By contrast, Kiwis pay an average of just $97.5 for 1Gbps plans.
Internet Australia chairman Paul Brooks told The New Daily political machinations coupled with a lack of competition are largely responsible for the high prices consumers are forced to pay.
The nation’s monopoly broadband wholesaler – the NBN Co – is required to recover costs and turn a profit within an extremely short timeframe – just 10 years compared to up to 50 years for other major infrastructure projects – and retail internet service providers (ISPs) and consumers are being slugged heavily as a result, Dr Brooks said.
“The NBN is a political beast, it is being forced to recover costs and become profitable within only 10 years, whereas any other network that had to span the size of the Australian continent and over-build the existing networks with brand new networks would normally not be required to pay back the capital for 30 to 50 years,” he said.
The government’s 10-year mandate is “absolutely hurting consumers because it’s forcing NBN to charge higher prices than it would otherwise have to”, Dr Brooks said.
“Plus, [the NBN Co] is doing things in an extremely expensive manner, and what that has led to is a component called CVC (or connectivity virtual circuit) which is a surcharge that ISPs have to pay to connect to the points of interconnect for bandwidth that is tens to hundreds of times more expensive than it actually needs to be for the infrastructure,” he said.
The $51 billion taxpayer-funded infrastructure project is slated for completion in 2020, with the NBN Co promising to have 8.1 million homes and businesses using the service, and a further 11.7 million ready to connect.
There are currently around 6.19 million households and businesses connected to the NBN, and more than 10 million that are ready to connect.
Last month, the NBN Co unveiled new speed tiers that will hit the market in May, and shaved dollars off its wholesale prices, after a five-month wholesale pricing review.
However, experts warned that consumers will only benefit from the reduced wholesale prices if telcos pass the savings on.
Pricey internet creating a ‘digital divide’
Consumer advocates and technology academics continue to warn that both the high cost of access to the NBN, and the hotchpotch nature of the multi-technology network, is creating a digital divide in Australia.
According to the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network (ACCAN), more than one million households are currently locked out of the NBN due to its high cost.
“Unfortunately, we know that the affordability of broadband services is an ongoing worry for many Australians. We’re not alone in highlighting this; recently we’ve seen everyone from Infrastructure Australia to the Human Rights Commission acknowledge this as a growing concern,” ACCAN spokesperson Melyssa Troy told The New Daily.
If broadband affordability is not addressed, the digital divide between those who are connected and those who aren’t is only going to deepen.
“This will have a serious impact on those left behind, especially as we see everything from banking to government services increasingly move online.”
In May, research by University of Sydney urban infrastructure expert Tooran Alizadeh revealed one in two households in Australia’s three biggest cities will be dudded with an inferior NBN connection.
“When I was finalising this research it really got me one more time that we have been cheated,” Dr Alizadeh said.
RMIT University telecommunications expert Mark Gregory described the NBN, which is already more than $5 billion over budget, as “a second-rate obsolete network”.
The NBN Co has insisted that the network is on par with those of comparable nations, touting it as “one of the world’s most ambitious infrastructure projects”.
The post Australians are being gouged with some of the world’s highest internet prices appeared first on The New Daily.
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