Last August, Canada’s Competition Bureau was ordered to pay Rogers $13 million.

Why?

“How often are they going to increase prices before Canadians say ‘that’s enough?’”

Nida Zafar,
MobileSyrup

Our merger court decided that the bureau’s attempts to block the Rogers-Shaw merger, led by commissioner of competition Matthew Boswell, were “unreasonable.” 

Rogers’ pitch at the time was that this merger would keep down costs for Canadians. And what happened to start the year? Prices went up (and not just at Rogers)!

As a longtime telecom reporter, I can tell you that prices going up (and the fact that Canada has some of the highest bills in the world) is a song as old as time. This time, however, the price hikes seem to have struck a nerve.

MPs are up in arms, demanding the Standing Committee on Industry and Technology reconvene to discuss the issue. The results of that meeting? Agreement that someone should study why Canadian phone plans keep increasing in price and not much else

On the day that he approved the merger, Minister of Innovation, Science, and Industry, Francois-Phillippe Champagne, threatened “further legislative and regulatory” action if he didn’t start seeing prices go down.

In response to the latest curfuffle, Champagne lamented that “Canadians still pay too much and see too little competition,” while his ISED representatives were advising Canadians to “consider switching service providers.”

But as our guest this week, MobileSyrup telecom reporter Nida Zafar, tells us on the podcast, changing carriers won’t change prices, because Canada is in a competition crisis

So we know why this keeps happening. The big question: what happens next?

Well, Matthew Boswell’s term was extended in December, a week after he received new powers to combat anti-competitive practices (#FreeBoswell). Perhaps coincidentally, Rogers was named number one in customer complaints for the first time in 15 years.

Did Rogers finally cross a line, riling Canadians (and our elected representatives) into action?

Let’s dig in.

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The BetaKit Podcast is hosted by Douglas Soltys & Rob Kenedi. Recorded at CreatorClub. Feature image courtesy SimonP at the English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0.

The post Maybe the Rogers-Shaw merger won’t lower prices after all first appeared on BetaKit.

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