2004News

Services will continue up

Sunday?s edition of El Caribe newspaper reported that telephone, cable and
electricity service will continue to pinch the family purse. According to the
paper, these services are now a privilege for some. The ?Gonzalez family? ? a
fictitious entity ? has two professional parents with three children, for
instance. They had to remove the ?0? and the ?1? from their telephone because
the bill had escalated to RD$4000 a month, and this, plus the RD$2,500 for
electricity, RD$500 for water and RD$800 for cable TV, was too much for the
family?s monthly income of RD$40,000. Both Verizon and Tricom telecommunication
firms agree that the 166% devaluation of the peso is the prime cause for the
increase in the costs of their services. Besides the regular cost of service,
there is the 2% tax and the 12% VAT which are added on to the bill. A letter
sent by Benigno Gonz?lez to the Verizon clients announced a 35% price increase
along with an 18? per-minute increase in the price of local calls, and national
long distance calls were increased by 15? a minute, going up to RD$3.10 a
minute. Tricom raised their prices by 21%. Cable TV was not far behind, as they
announced price increases that varied from 43% to 56%, according to Telecable
and Aster. Electricity, of course, is a different story. The electricity
distributors have been serving up price increases of between 4% and 8% for
months now. George Reinoso, the Superintendent of Electricity, told reporters
that there is nothing to be done about this since the IMF Stand-By Agreement
requires a 48% adjustment in the price of electricity, and oil is reaching near
historic prices of US$40 dollars a barrel.