Dispute Resolution Scenario in Cable & Broadcasting Sectors TDSAT SEMINAR December 2009 This presentation expresses the personal views of the speaker and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How Global Markets Work Because we trade with people in other countries, the goods and services that we can buy and consume are not limited by what.
Advertisements

Policy & the Perfectly Competitive Model: Consumer & Producer Surplus
TRAI and tariff reform The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the ITU or its Membership.
Policy and Regulatory Challenges – Technology Providers View February 14 Challenges for Successful Implementation of ICT Projects Challenges for Successful.
The Minimum Price Contract. Purpose of a Minimum Price Contract Minimum price contracts are one of the marketing tools available to producers to help.
Economics for Leaders Lesson 4: Markets In Action.
International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition
An Introduction to International Economics
International Trade Policy
Leading Edge Technology. Multiple Dwelling Units What is the DirecTV MDU?
Ind – Develop a foundational knowledge of pricing to understand its role in marketing. (Part II) Entrepreneurship I.
Revision: The price level
Salary caps, team payrolls and competitive balance.
7 chapter: >> Taxes Krugman/Wells Economics
Financial Sector Review Questions
ROLE OF THE GOVERNMENT.
Presentation By Mrs Roop Sharma President, Cable Operators Federation of India (COFI) On Dispute Resolution in Broadcasting Sector 17 th July, 2010, Raipur,
What Regulations apply? The Telecommunication (Broadcasting and Cable Services) Interconnection Regulation, 2004 amended eight times till date. Which.
TAXATION Aparna.
Stake Holders Broadcasters Multi System Operators (MSO) Franchisees/cable Operators (LCO) End Subscribers TRAI /Government.
Overview & Consumer Orientation of the DTH TDSAT Seminar ; Aug 22 nd 09 ; Lucknow Anshuman Sharma Chief Legal & Regulatory Affairs Officer, Tata Sky Ltd.
Why the Government gets involved. Mixed Economies – Market side The U.S. has….. Free Enterprise – very little government and more consumer sovereignty.
CREE Site Visit Oslo, September 19, 2013 Who Should Pay for Transmission? Nils-Henrik M. von der Fehr.
1 The Making of Broadcast Media Disorder: A Political Economy Perspective Hamilton Cheng, PhD. Public Television Service a Taiwan Response at CWM 2004.
Pay Channel Market: Realities & Reforms TDSAT Presentation May 2010.
STATE OF ISRAEL MINISTRY OF COMMUNICATIONS Fixed-Mobile Convergence Regulatory Point of View Daniel Rosenne Director General, Ministry of Communications,
The Quest for Profit and
Labour’s 2015 Manifesto Consultation Process: 1.‘Conversations’ ( ) 2.‘Policy Commissions’ produce consultation papers 3.Papers to the National Policy.
Iמשרד התקשורת Israel Ministry of Communications Internet (over-the-top) services and challenges to regulation Adi Cahan-Gonen Senior Professional Advisor.
ENTREPRENEURS IN A MARKET ECONOMY
Regulatory Administrative Institutions MPA 517 Lecture-8 1.
APRESENTATIONTO TELECOM DISPUTES SETTLEMENT & APPELLATE TRIBUNAL (TDSAT) Presented by Presented by Jawahar Goel Jawahar GoelPresident Indian Broadcasting.
American Free Enterprise
Cable TV Industry – INDIA
International Telecommunication Union Committed to Connecting the World The World in 2009: ICT Facts and Figures Jaroslaw K. PONDER Strategy and Policy.
“Status of Dispute Settlement Mechanism in the Telecom Sector in India” 24 th March, 2007 Ahmedabad Presentation by A.K. Sinha CMD BSNL.
The Right to:  To purchase products and brands that you want and reject the others  To become any profession that you want  Enter into any enterprise.
Pradeep S. Mehta Secretary General CUTS International Jaipur, India CONSUMER REDRESSAL IN THE TELECOM AND CABLE SECTORS.
The Free Enterprise System
INDIAN C&S MARKET– DISTRIBUTION PERSPECTIVE December 18, 2005 Presentation by Shri Anuj Gandhi, President, SET Discovery Pvt. Ltd. at TDSAT Open House.
MANJUL BAJPAI AHMEDABAD STATUS OF DISPUTE SETTLEMENT MECHANISM IN TELECOM AND BROADCASTING SECTORS IN INDIA.
MSO and the Regulatory Framework. TRUTH AT THE GROUND LEVEL  The charges payable by MSOs to broadcasters are fixed on mutually agreed / lump–sum amounts.
IMBA Managerial Economics Jack Wu. Econ Efficiency: Conditions for all users, same marginal benefit for all suppliers, same marginal cost marginal benefit.
Hosted IPTV Service our partner approach to IPTV subscriber growth Alexander Vaglarov Vestitel BG Jsc.
Digital Addressable Systems
DAS - THE FUTURE REGULATORY IMPLICATIONS IN DIGITAL ADDRESSABLE SYSTEMS (DAS) KUNAL TANDON ADVOCATE.
1 A Case of Merger Remedies Sangmin Song Korea Fair Trade Commission.
Seminar on Dispute Resolution in Telecom and Broadcasting Sectors TDSAT 20 th November 2010, Bangalore.
Digitalisation Heading Nowhere! TDSAT Seminar, Nainital (Uttarakhand)
Presentation By R K Arnold I.T.S. Secretary, TRAI TDSAT Seminar, Chennai on Dispute Resolution in Telecom.
TDSAT SEMINAR DISPUTE RESOLUTION AND REDRESSAL OF CONSUMER GRIEVANCES IN BROADCASTING SECTOR (March 13, 2010) Presented by: A. Mohan Executive Vice President.
TDSAT SEMINAR “D ISPUTE R ESOLUTION S CENARIO IN B ROADCASTING S ECTORS ” 30/08/2008 Presented by : Avnindra Mohan ZEE NETWORK.
Unit 1: What is economics all ABOUT? Chapters 1-6.
Free Enterprise System
ECONOMIC BASICS.
Subscribers Your D2H Created By : Ccnumber.inCcnumber.in.
ETHICS IN THE MARKETPLACE chapter 5. Competition  is part of the free enterprise system. Competition tends to produce efficiency in the market and benefits.
MANJUL BAJPAI Mumbai – “DISPUTE RESOLUTION IN TELECOM AND BROADCASTING SECTORS”
“Growth of broadcasting & cable sectors in India & Challenges ahead” 20 th Jan’08.
The European way to think the Digital World Technological convergence and new business models: the example of TV over DSL Extending ICT Opportunities.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 5-1 Chapter 4 Ethics in the marketplace.
Unit 2 Glossary. Macroeconomics The study of issues that effect economies as a whole.
Marketing April 20, 2015 Price Planning. Discuss with your neighbor  Discuss the relationship between price and the other P’s of the marketing mix. 
Chapter 17 (pgs.445FL1-471) The Economic System. Chapter 17 Section 1 (pgs ) The Economic System at Work ESSENTIAL QUESTION: WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENT.
DIGITAL ADDRESSABLE SYSTEMS Vibhav Srivastava Advocate
Goods & Service Tax Considered the biggest policy reform in the country since Independence Amalgamating several Central and State taxes into a single tax.
Digital Addressable Systems, Challenges & Way Forward
DISPUTE SETTLEMENT MECHANISM
Agriculture Marketing as a part of Agri-business
Ind – Develop a foundational knowledge of pricing to understand its role in marketing. (Part II) Entrepreneurship I.
Presentation transcript:

Dispute Resolution Scenario in Cable & Broadcasting Sectors TDSAT SEMINAR December 2009 This presentation expresses the personal views of the speaker and are not necessarily those of the company.

because : THEY ARE MAINTAINING LOW ARPUS. because : THEY ARE GIVING MORE AND MORE CHANNELS BY ECONOMISING ON THEIR OVER HEADS because ; DUE TO LOWER SCALE OF ARPUS BY THEM, DTH OPERATORS ARE NOT ABLE TO INCREASE THEIR SUBSCRIPTION because : THEY OPERATE WITH BARE MINIMUM OVERHEADS AND DONNOT SPEN ON HIGH END ADVTS OF SHARUKH OR AMIR KHANS OR HRITIK because ; THEY DO NOT SPEND ON DRESSUP because ; THEY GIVE FREE PERSONALISED SERVICES VIS A VIS FACELESS COSTLY BACKUP SERVICE BY DTH PLAYERS because : THEY ARE SERVING AAM ADMI VIS A VIS HIGH END SOCIETY SERVICED BY DTH because : THEY ARE BASHED BY BROADCASTERS FOR LUMPSUM DEALS UNDER THE COVER OF UNDER DECLARATION, WHERE AS SAME BROADCASTERS ARE ENTERING INTO LONG TERM (3Yrs) LUMPSUM DEALS WITH DTH OPERATORS WHERE THEY CAN EASILY CHARGE ON PER SUB BASES. STILL THAT IS NOT UNDER DECLARATION. Because : PAY CHANNEL TARIFF APPLICABLE TO THEM IS DOUBLE TO THAT BEING CHARGED TO DTH PLAYER. MSOs and LCOs BAD BOYS

Indias Cable Distribution Industry Industry Fundamentals

The Indian TV Market Today 450 TV channels Average payments per household: Rs. 150/- 120 million TV households 85 million cable TV homes 15 million DTH homes. Millions of Homes Served Great Service at Nominal Cost A Thriving Consumer Driven Market India Has a Large Television Market, Dominated by Cable

TV Households 180 Million Cable TV Households 120 Million (67% of TV Homes) DTH Households 30 Million (16% of TV Homes) Source: MPA Report, 2008 A Large Market Where Cable Will Continue to Serve 2/3rds of Indias Homes Estimates for the Indian TV Market in 2014

BROADCASTERS MULTI SYSTEM OPERATOR (MSO) LOCAL CABLE OPERATORS (LCO) SUBSCRIBERS INDEPENDENT CABLE OPERATOR DIRECT SUBS LCO DIRECT SUBS SUBSCRIBERS Cable Distribution Models in India

The Worlds Cheapest Cable Service No of TV Channels has Gone from 2 in 1991 to over 100 in 2009… Cable ARPUs - India vs Other Nations (US$) …Yet, The Household Cable Bill Has Remained Rs 100 – 150 per month Note: There are over 450 TV channels licensed to downlink in India, but an average analog home receives about 100 channels

Cable: A Large Employment Generator Early Cable Operators needed staff to grow and support their operations, creating a massive employment boom Over 6 – 7 lakh people across the country were employed in the initial phase alone, as technicians, collection agents, etc. Today, there are an estimated 60,000 Local Cable Operators (LCOs); 6,000 Independent Cable Operators; 100 Multi System Operators (MSOs) The Cable Distribution Industry Employs Several Lakhs Across India Today

Cable: An Essential Service Cable broadcasting may not be an essential commodity in the sense that it is not an item of food without which one cannot survive, yet looking to the figures of TV viewership in this country its importance cannot be underestimated. Available figures suggest a TV viewership of 68 million for the whole country. This shows that television viewing has almost attained the status of an essential service in this country. Honble TDSAT in its judgment dt. 27/02/2007 in Case of Set Discovery Vs. TRAI & Others Cable/ Satellite TV is An Everyday Utility for the Common Man in Todays India

The Major Issues Facing Indian Cable Demand from consumers to provide world class Cable TV services at a fair price Need for a fair distribution of revenue to all parts of the value chain Effective regulation of the monopolistic advantages of content providers (broadcasters) Equal opportunities and a fair competitive environment

Consumer Demands Best Service… World Class Quality – Digital, etc. Unlimited choice of channels No interruption in cable TV services Consumer redressal system … At Cheap Prices Want monthly bills to be low No price discrimination More value for money Consumers are demanding more from their cable provider: But at low rates

MSOs and Economies of Scale Economics of the Cable Business A single cable operator needs a head-end with facility for 100 channels Given the average no. of homes each operator reaches, his ARPUs would need to be above Rs 700 p.m. to break-even Enter MSOs Economies of Scale The MSO sets up head- ends and other infrastructure at this own expense Small operators can then avail of this service without large Investment ARPUs remain low & the consumer benefits An MSO Shoulders the High Investment Required for Cable Distribution… …Brings about Economies of Scale in the Cable Industry

MSOs in a Lose-Lose Situation MSOs Spend Vast Amounts on Cable Infrastructure, But Has No Returns on Investment MSO Bleeds With Disproportionately Low Revenues Allocation of Subscription Collected from Households Broadcasters Corner 50-60% of Subscription Other Leaks 30% is Lost in the Value Chain

Cable Spectrum & Right of Way Govt. auctioning cable spectrum: monetising a cable resource Double Downside for Cable: Loses spectrum + No share of sale proceeds Government Should Pass Share of Spectrum Sale & Provide Explicit Right of Way to Cable Players Spectrum Loss No clarity on Right of Way Cable Operators effectively denied a Right of Way Only IPTV license holders have right of fibre access Right of Way

Cable Value Chain Destruction

Broadcasters: Heavy Handed Tactics Broadcasters: Unreasonable Conduct in Dealings with MSOs Subscription at All Costs Operators losing subscribers – but broadcasters demand increases in subscription payout Higher subscription for Digital: Although subscribers & service areas are the same the same Bundling to extract money for niche/ low viewership channels Unfair, contradictory, and often illegal methods to increase subscriptions Rampant Arm-Twisting Promotes competition in the area while demanding renewal of service agreements Interruption of services at their own will No action against Piracy in the service area Add and subtract the channels or bouquets as per own convenience Each Party Should Receive their Legitimate Share from the Collections from Subscribers

Broadcasters Unfair Demands: An Illustration C&S Universe 85 mn Homes DTH 15 mn Homes Cable (Total) 70 mn Homes Pay: 60 mn Homes Rs 150 – 170) FTA: 10 mn Homes Rs 80) Total Pay Revenues: Rs 6000 cr Broadcasters Legitimate 30%-40% Rs cr Broadcasters Actual Pay Incomes Rs 3000 cr + Broadcasters Already Taking More than Fair Share of Revenues: So Where is the Room for Increase ?

Broadcasters & DTH Broadcasters Stance on Pay Revenues Illogical… …As DTH subscribers go up, Subscription Payout by Cable Should Fall, Not Rise as is Currently the Case Broadcasters demand per-sub payments from cable operators & allege under-declaration as basis for hikes DTH is supposed to be a fully addressable and transparent system where no. of subscribers is known Still, Broadcasters are entering into fixed fee deals – Not on Per Sub basis! Such deals with DTH are long term in nature – meaning DTH may take subscribers away from cable, but broadcasters will receive the same amount from DTH

Broadcasters Bouquet Extortion Broadcaster Pay Model: Cable Only 1 or 2 main channels per broadcaster The large broadcasters have built bouquets around this They then push small/ niche channels into the bouquet and demand hikes Cable operators not in a position to hike ARPUs DTH Model for Small Channels DTH takes up niche channels for far lower amounts Charge subscribers much higher rates for these small channels

The Road Ahead What Reforms Can Strengthen the Industry

Ensure A Level Playing Field Effectively monitoring on QoS Implementation Policy framework for long term franchisee agreements to protect the MSO-LCO chain Let Platforms Choose Delivery Format MSOs should have freedom to choose appropriate format for their signals No separate licensing requirements should be imposed on this front Broadcaster price freezes should be true in spirit & substance No separate hikes in subscription just for digitalization Right of Way mechanism empowering Cable TV should be formulated Government positive initiatives for Digitalization Regulate Broadcasters Other Reforms Quality Reforms will ensure that the industry is strong Consumers will be the ultimate beneficiaries

Main Cause of Disputes Need for a Dispute Resolution Mechanism Interconnection Issues Transparency Capacity augmentation Piracy checks Strict regulation of broadcasters Possible Modes of Resolution

All India Policy Consistency: Taxation & Expectations Current Regime: Double Taxation/ Uncertainty Central Level: Service Tax State Level: VAT Entertainment Tax Different States have different expectations from operators Create a Single Tax for the Cable Industry Align Policy so expectations from the Cable Industry are Consistent Across the Country

Cable: Only Industry Governed by an Act As per the Cable Act, the operator gets prosecuted for content transmitted Over 450 channels on air Provisions of the act unfair burden on operators to monitor all content Onus should be on broadcasters Cable Operators Subject to Prosecution for Content Violations No Act Governing/ Regulating Broadcasters & DTH Laws & Regulations Should Put Everyone on a Level Playing Field

Thank You