Hi Chris!
According to a 1999 survey, the average American household spends
$21/month for long distance services:
"According to a sampling of residential telephone bills, in 1999 the
average household spent $64 monthly on telecommunications. Of this,
$21 were for services provided by long distance carriers, $34 for
services by local exchange carriers and the remainder for services by
wireless carriers."
Additonally, of these charges, 38% of long distance calls were
interstate, and accounted for 50% of toll calling revenues.
Statistics of the Long Distance Telecommunications Industry
http://www.utilityregulation.com/reports/request-file.cfm?t=d&f=ldrpt101.pdf
(You'll need to register to view the full report, but it's free and
only takes a second to do so.)
Total revenues by vendor (Sprint, GTE, Worldcom, etc.) can be found on
page 9 of this report, or detailed household usage by vendor by means
of an extensive marketing report. The cost of the report is $2400:
Long Distance Competition: IP Telephony, RBOCs, IXCs and Fiber
http://www.gii.co.jp/english/sg4524_yy_long_distance_toc.html
Additional long distance data can be found at UtilityRegulation.com,
which offers a variety of telecommunications reports, including
earlier breakdowns of residential long distance spending:
FCC Reports
http://www.utilityregulation.com/reports/rt2.htm
I hope this information suits your needs. If you need further
assistance, just ask, and I'll be glad to help.
--Missy
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