Telecom for improving investment climate & ICT use Rohan Samarajiva, Public Interest Program Unit, Ministry of Economic Reform, Science & Technology

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Competitive Market in Public / Private Education.
Advertisements

World Trends in Telecommunications
GAMBIA COMPETITION COMMISSION GAMBIA COMPETITION COMMISSION Levelling the Field for Development BY : EXECUTIVE SECRETARY 5 TH JUNE 2013.
Linking pension reform and financial market development: the LA experience Augusto Iglesias P. PrimAmerica Consultores Bled, Slovenia. June 9, 2007.
How the developing world may participate in the global Internet Economy: Innovation driven by competition Rohan Samarajiva
International Conference on Small States and Economic Resilience April 2007 Valetta, Malta Islands and Small States Institute Government intervention.
Independent regulation: Why it’s needed for sector growth Rohan Samarajiva Yangon, 26 July 2014 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from.
Regulation & investment: Sri Lanka case study Rohan Samarajiva & Sabina Fernando
Trade Rules in Services: Issues and Problems Carsten Fink, The World Bank EU-LDC Network Annual Conference Trade and Poverty Reduction Rotterdam, 30 and.
Presenter: Avita Singh Financial Analyst Public Utilities Commission Guyana.
Why and how of ICT policy, strategy and plans Rohan Samarajiva Nagarkot, March 2015 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International.
LIBERALISATION ERA FOR INDIAN TELECOM REGULATION INDUSTRY WORKSHOP by Rakesh Agrawal, ITS (Retd,) Director, CMAI Former Advisor Technology, DOT Government.
Regulatory Environment and Small-hydro Development Professor Priyantha D C Wijayatunga Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka and University of Moratuwa.
PPP’s IN NIGERIA: Prospects in the Water Sector
Tele2 5 March 2008 EPP-ED Public Hearing Mikael Grape.
1 A Review of Potential Gains from Reforms ECRA Workshop 6 November 2006 Dr Brian Wharmby Independent Consultant, former Technical Director of Ofgem
International Seminar on ICT Policy Reform and Rural Communication Infrastructure Keio University, Shonan Fujisawa, Japan, 24th August Paul Moffatt.
Public vs Private Management of Pension Funds* Augusto Iglesias P. PrimAmérica Consultores March, 2000 * Presented at the Regional Conference on Social.
1 Trade Facilitation A narrow sense –A reduction/streamlining of the logistics of moving goods through ports or the documentation requirements at a customs.
LECTURE. FORMATION OF PRICE FOR THE COMPANIES PRODUCT Plan lectures 1. Price and types of prices 2. Classification prices 3. Pricing policy of the enterprise.
Introduction : Before 1991, economic development of the country was due to the public sector. But it is realized that public sector was insufficient due.
COMPETITION LAW & POLICY, ECONOMIC GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT: AUSTRALIA & INDONESIA A Brief Discussion Rafaelita M. Aldaba, PIDS 15 November 2011 Bali, Indonesia.
Telecom Regulatory Environment in “Digital Bangladesh”: Exploring the Reasons behind Poor Sector Specific Performance CPRSouth 6, Bangkok, Thailand December,
Legislation, policies, plans, strategies, regulation Rohan Samarajiva Yangon, 26 July 2014 This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the International.
Chapter 7.1 Trade Between Nations.
ProFina - Project and Private Finance Feb 2002 Whither Private Sector Participation? Private Investment in the Utility Industries – Energy, Transport,
1 ALLEVIATING THE REGULATORY BURDEN: THAILAND CASE STUDY at Regional Conference on Investment Climate and Competitiveness in East Asia- from Diagnostics.
The Interface between S ector Regulation and Competition Law —The China’s choice Shiying Xu Professor,East China University of Political Science and Law.
International Seminar on ICT Policy Reform and Rural Communication Infrastructure, Keio University, Japan Rethinking telecom reform model: the case of.
ICT Sector & Regulatory Performance Indicators for Developing Asia Rohan Samarajiva & Sriganesh Lokanathan
Creating an independent regulatory framework in an imperfect world Rohan Samarajiva LIRNEasia, Sri Lanka
Interface between Competition Policy and Sectoral Regulation in the Namibia’s Telecoms Sector Rehabeam Shilimela NEPRU.
International Regulatory Trends Sector specific independent regulators separate from line ministries Competition authorities have been given an enhanced.
Interim solution to CDMA introduction Rohan Samarajiva, Public Interest Program Unit, MERST.
Role of benchmarks in the regulation of partially competitive markets Rohan Samarajiva Benchmarking and regulation Workshop, Malé 6 December.
DG Information Society 1 Liberalisation and regulation in Electronic Communications in the EU 2nd ICT Summit Istanbul, 3-6 September 2002 Hans-Peter Gebhardt.
Telecom Reforms: Achieving Higher Growth ASSOCHAM Interaction with TRAI on New Policy Initiatives 18 Oct 2004: New Delhi S C Khanna Secretary General Association.
Impact of Liberalization of the Electricity Market on Energy Efficiency, Quality of Supply and Environmental Performance Eric BONNEVILLE ECI Webconference.
NATIONAL ICT CONVENTION UNIVERSAL ACCESS AS A MEDIUM-TERM STRATEGY FOR ICT. PRESENTATION BY Mr. ALEX KAHINDI CCK 24 th March 2004 SAFARI PARK HOTEL.
Presentation to meeting convened by High-level Commission on IT Rohan Samarajiva Executive Director, LIRNEasia Kathmandu, 10 December 2004.
Liberalization of Telecommunications in Europe Pál Belényesi 27 October 2006 Verona.
GHSGT Review Economics. Unit 1 – Fundamental Concepts of Economics.
16 August Capacity Building on Competition Policy in Namibia Rehabeam Shilimela NEPRU.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS POLICY IN A RAPIDLY EVOLVING MARKET CTO conference on implementing the WSIS Action Plan, NAIROBI, th March,2004. Presented by.
© 2005 by Center for Energy Economics, Bureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas at Austin. All rights reserved. 1 Efficacy of Energy Regulators.
Internet Policy Day 3 - Workshop Session No. 5 The impact of telecomms regulation Prepared for CTO by Link Centre, Witwatersrand University, South Africa.
2.Global trends and underlying forces determining the progress on the world IC sector 2.1. Reforms of IC sector - evolution of legislation and regulations.
Subsidies in Eastern Telecommunication in Nepal Bhoop Raj Pandey Consultant.
Self-learning material: Regulation Rohan Samarajiva
Regulatory Management and Reform in India Siddhartha Mitra and Vijay Vir Singh.
1 MTN PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON COMMUNICATIONS Hearings on Telecoms Policy Directions 3 April 2001 Irene Charnley – Chairperson, M-Cell.
Economic benefits and implications in investing and deploying new technologies - Bridging Digital Divide with Mobility Dr. Walid Moneimne SVP, Nokia Networks.
Economic Freedom & Consumer Rights: Lessons from Sri Lankan Experience Rohan Samarajiva Seminar on Economic Freedom in South Asia: A.
Private Sector Development Competition and Anti Monopoly The World Bank Mission February-March, 2004.
Monopoly Pros –Easier to effect social policy (universal service for example) –Economies of scale and scope Cons –Lack of incentive for innovation –Inefficiencies.
Issues in Regulation Presentation by: Gajendra Haldea New Delhi, December 5, 2006.
Amman October 1-2, 2003 Presentation Evolution of Saudi Telecom During Sector Reform 3 rd Annual Private Sector Cooperation Meeting in the Arab Region.
Judicial interventions: Sri Lanka experience Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNE.NET & Delft University of Technology SAFIR Workshop on Legal Aspects of Regulation.
Gints Zeltiņš Commissioner of the Public Utilities Commission of Latvia Multi-sectoral regulator: Public Utilities Commission of Latvia.
Telecom Regulatory Environment Indian Case Payal Malik.
Privatization The transfer of public functions and resources to the private sector –Involves transfer of operations, management, or ownership The entry.
Licensing Rules for Communications Networks and Services CONSULTATION DRAFT FEBRUARY 2014.
Workshop for West-African Telecommunication Regulators Abuja (Nigeria), September 21-22, 2000.
Regulatory Adjudication in Resolution of Disputes
Legislation, policies, plans, strategies, regulation
Power Sector Reform in Asia
Power Sector Reform in Asia
Market Access Barriers in Mobile Communication
Diversifying Participation in Network Development
Presentation transcript:

Telecom for improving investment climate & ICT use Rohan Samarajiva, Public Interest Program Unit, Ministry of Economic Reform, Science & Technology

Purpose of presentation  Reform of telecom is a necessary condition for investment overall  Creating conditions for private investment in telecom Market entry Independent & effective regulation  Examples from Sri Lanka throughout

Sri Lanka’s telecom sector after 12 years of reforms  Multiple operators (70+) 3 national fixed (no waiters in urban areas) 4 national mobile (overtook fixed; real price declined) 5+ facilities-based data 30 external gateway (~66% decrease in price) 20+ non-facilities based data  Fixed teledensity < 1 in 1991  almost 5 in 2003; Mobile ~0.01 in 1991  5 < in 2003  Telecom & banking are fastest growing sectors in economy in 2003 (~16%)  Telecom no longer a barrier to investment

Telecom as a necessary condition for increased investment  Two solutions Improve service only in enclave Improve sector performance everywhere  Sri Lanka tried the enclave solution in 1980s Supplementing exchange & outside plant in Katunayake EPZ Giving priority to GCEC factories (investors) Poor results including ridiculous outcome of banning automatic rediallers

Investment in telecom sector overall is key...  What we want is Adequate supply of services Lower prices Higher quality More choice  How do we get it? Not another reform of the failed government monopoly Not regulation, per se More investment

Private investment to improve telecom  Telecom is the infrastructure with the most dynamic industry structures and technologies Integrated government monopolies lack nimbleness to play  No multilateral/bilateral assistance for unreformed monopolies  Public investments better used elsewhere

Government action to attract private investment in telecom  Greater private investment depends on positive answers to 2 questions Are the returns adequate? (market risk) Are safeguards against administrative expropriation adequate? (regulatory risk)  What can government do? Let investors look after market risk: no market-position guarantees Reduce regulatory risk

Government actions: Market entry & privatization  Minimize barriers to entry; SL policy is License only where scarce resources are involved Otherwise authorizations  Examples External gateway operator licenses  30 given since March 2003  No discretion; no numerical limits

Entry conditions compared One-time fee (USD) Annual fees Bank guarantee India5,200,00015% of gross rev. Very high Pakistan500,000<0.5% gr. rev. + acc. contr. USD 10 million Sri Lanka50,0000.3% of gr. rev. None to govt.

Results...  From unstable monopoly to open entry...  From SLR 75 a minute to  Telecom no longer seen as barrier to BPO investments

Incumbent Government Owned; No Competition Incumbent Partially Privatized; Foreign Management; Competition Fixed telephony investments in Sri Lanka,

Implications for the exchequer  Before the reforms, telecom was an easy but small source of government revenue Very low rates for domestic (<40% revenues); high rates on international outgoing and termination (60<% revenues) Periodic levies  After the reforms, it is an easy, reliable and LARGER source of government revenue ~20% tax (VAT; BTT earlier); reliable  On a user base that has increased seven fold Equity sales; licensing; spectrum fees; contributions to Vishva Grama Fund (for rural rollout) Dividends from shareholding

Key reform events  Licensing of 15+ facilities-based operators, including Incumbent which was changed to corporation  1996 Licensing of two fixed competitors (USD 120 m)  % sale of Incumbent to NTT of Japan for USD 225 million with 5-year management agreement

Key reform events  1998 Active regulation starts First step of 5 year rate rebalancing Satellite gateways liberalized  1999 Incumbent found to be in violation of license condition and pays consumers US$ 1 million First public hearing conducted

Key reform events  2002 Government sells 12.5% of Incumbent’s equity, bringing government ownership to <50%  External Gateway Licenses issued New Interconnection Rules gazetted Implementation ongoing Already a commitment of USD 90 million additional investment

Government actions: Regulation  Reduce regulatory risk Poor countries are poor because  Government does not work well  regulatory risk is high  investments are low/skewed  infrastructure is inadequate  economy is hobbled  Solution: independent and effective regulatory agency

Characteristics of effective regulation  No interference by government/incumbent  Constrained discretion  Professional and competent staff  Transparent participatory processes  Expeditious decision making  Efforts to reduce adversarial modes; increase buy-in  Doing a few things well

Independence of regulatory agency  Information & Communication Commission that will replace TRC Members appointed with concurrence of Constitutional Council Accountable to/removable by Parliament Not reporting to Minister for Telecom

Constrained discretion  Rate rebalancing in governed by legal agreement that set revenue requirements Regulator decided specific tariffs that would yield promised revenues

Telecom regulation should focus on  Interconnection & anti-competitive issues In Sri Lanka  New interconnection rules in March 2003 Including access to undersea cable station Implementation in process  Dominant position rules being framed New legislation will remove tariff regulation from non-dominant operators  Anti-competitive practices proceedings soon

Regulation should focus on  Efficient management of scarce resources (spectrum, rights of way and numbers) In Sri Lanka  Allocation & assignments made public  1800 MHz, CDMA & WiFi consultations  First frequency auction in May 2003  New legislation on rights of way including “final offer” arbitration  New numbering plan being implemented

... And get out of unnecessary areas  Most retail tariffs unregulated in new Act (except of dominant operators)  Equipment approvals power replaced by Mutual Recognition approach  Consumer issues to be covered by consumer contracts Regulator intervenes only when contract provisions exhausted

SAARC countries telecom performance F/100CAGRM/100CAGR B’desh Bhutan India M’dives Nepal Pakistan SL