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WTO Telecommunications Reference Paper

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Title: Key Regulatory Issues in Implementing the BTA -- Interconnection Author: Franco Papandrea Last modified by: MickO Created Date: 10/31/2002 4:45:03 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: WTO Telecommunications Reference Paper


1
WTO Telecommunications Reference Paper
  • Prof Franco Papandrea
  • Director
  • Communication and Media Policy Institute
  • University of Canberra
  • Email franco.papandrea_at_canberra.edu.au

2
GATS TelecommunicationsRequirements
  • All WTO member countries are bound by GATS
    obligations and disciplines such as
  • Non-discriminatory market access provided to
    operators from member countries (Most Favoured
    Nation Treatment)
  • Licensing must not be used as a barrier to trade
  • All requirements for entry of foreign operators
    in telecommunications market must be published
    (Telecommunications Annex to GATS)
  • Comply with additional commitments made as part
    of WTO Agreement on Basic Telecommunications (ABT)

3
WTO Reference Paper
  • Annex to commitments of most WTO members under
    Agreement on Basic Telecommunications
  • Developed as part of the GATS negotiations on
    basic telecommunication services
  • Applies to basic telecom services (not value
    added)
  • Establishes legally binding principles for
    government regulation of major suppliers
  • A major supplier is one that can affect the terms
    of participation in the market (price and supply)
    because
  • it has control over essential facilities
  • It possess substantial market power
  • Essential facilities are elements of a public
    network necessary for the delivery of a service
  • that are exclusively provided by one operator
    and
  • whose substitution is not economically or
    technically feasible

4
Purpose of Reference Paper
  • Provides for special treatment of basic
    telecommunications services within GATS trade
    regime
  • Allows domestic regulation that may constrain
    free trade for social policy reasons
  • But sets limits to the extent and form of the
    regulation
  • Ensures that permissible regulation is
  • Transparent
  • Objective and
  • Non-discriminatory
  • Restrain major suppliers from anti-competitive
    use of their market power
  • Promote outcomes likely to prevail in a fully
    competitive market
  • Ensure equity and transparency in regulatory
    policy and procedures

5
Coverage
  • The WTO Telecommunications Reference Paper covers
    six areas
  • Safeguards to Prevent Anti-competitive Practices
    by Major Suppliers
  • Interconnection with Major Suppliers
  • Universal Service
  • Transparency in Licensing
  • Independent Regulator
  • Allocation and Use of Scarce Resources

6
Anti-Competitive Safeguards
  • Major suppliers have market power that can be
    used to frustrate competition
  • Ample opportunity to abuse market power
    particularly in the supply of services to other
    operators that compete with them
  • General approach is to ensure fair competition in
    the supply of services
  • WTO requires appropriate regulation to prevent
    major suppliers from engaging in or continuing
    anti-competitive practices, such as
  • Engaging in anti-competitive cross-subsidization
  • Using information obtained from competitors with
    anti-competitive results
  • Withholding timely technical information about
    essential facilities and commercially relevant
    information needed by competitors to supply
    services (in competition with major supplier).

7
Interconnection
  • Interconnection is extremely important to the
    competitive supply of telecommunication services
  • An established operator can frustrate competition
    in a variety of ways including
  • Charging excessive rates for interconnection
  • Unnecessarily delay provision of equipment and
    facilities needed for interconnection
  • Misuse of customer and competitive information
  • Impose limits on the number of points of
    interconnection
  • Impose unnecessarily stringent technical
    standards for interconnection
  • Supply a lower grade of network services to
    interconnecting parties

8
Regulation of Interconnection
  • Effective and efficient interconnection
    arrangements backed by regulator needed
  • WTO requires regulation to establish the right of
    competitors to interconnect with major suppliers
  • The rates and procedures for interconnection must
    be enforceable
  • The rates and procedures for interconnection must
    be available publicly
  • Public procedures must be established for the
    resolution of interconnection disputes

9
Reasons for Public Procedures
  • Publicly available principles and procedures for
    interconnection are required because
  • Established suppliers have little or no incentive
    to facilitate competitors connections to their
    facilities
  • Publication of principles and procedures will
    facilitate negotiations and reduce disputes
  • Avoids special or anti-competitive deals not
    available to all operators
  • Major suppliers should be required to either
    publish their interconnection agreements or a
    reference interconnection
  • Regulator may publish a reference agreement
    applicable to all parties setting out minimum
    requirements for interconnection
  • Dispute settlement should be on the same basis as
    the published principles and procedures for
    interconnection
  • Dispute settlement must be timely

10
WTO Interconnection Requirements
  • Interconnection must be provided on transparent
    non-discriminatory terms, conditions and rates
  • Rates must be transparent, cost-oriented and
    reasonable having regard to economic feasibility
  • The interconnecting service must be sufficiently
    unbundled to exclude payment for components or
    facilities not required for the supply of the
    service
  • Interconnection must be ensured at any
    technically feasible point
  • On request, at other than network termination
    points on charges reflecting the cost of
    construction of necessary additional facilities
  • Interconnection must be supplied in a timely
    fashion
  • Quality must be no less favourable than that
    provided to the own production of similar
    services.

11
Interconnection Charges
  • Charges should approximate those likely to
    prevail in a competitive market.
  • WTO requires cost-oriented rates but does not
    specify the use of a particular methodology
  • The basis of calculating appropriate rates,
    therefore, requires judicious consideration and
    careful choice
  • A major feature of competitive markets is that
    prices of products or services naturally tend
    towards marginal cost

12
Economic Cost Models
SRMC (Short run marginal cost)

LRIC (Long run incremental cost)
Specifically related fixed costs
variations include LRAIC, TSLRIC, TELRIC


Specifically related fixed costs
FDC (Fully distributed cost)
Allocate part of common costs



SAC (Stand alone cost)
All fixed and common costs
Specifically related fixed costs
Allocate part of common costs




13
Universal Service
  • Most countries consider access to
    telecommunications services to be important for
    social and economic development
  • The primary objective of universal service is
    policies is to provide basic telecommunication
    services at affordable prices to everyone
  • Without such a policy, access to services in many
    areas, including rural and remote, would reflect
    the high cost of serving those areas
  • Traditionally, cross-subsidies were used by
    monopolist operators to fund the provision of
    access in high cost areas
  • In a liberalized environment, competitive
    operators will not supply uneconomic areas
    without some form of universal service obligation
    (USO)

14
WTO USO Provisions
  • A country has the right to define the kind of
    universal service obligation it wishes to
    maintain.
  • Any such USO obligation will not be regarded as
    anticompetitive per se, provided it is
  • Transparent
  • Non-discriminatory
  • Competitively neutral
  • No more burdensome than necessary to achieve the
    defined universal service.
  • Important to define a practical and realistic
    universal service goal
  • No more burdensome usually means that levies
    are cost-based and relate only to provision of
    USO services

15
Purposes of Licensing
  • Licensing is used for a variety of reasons,
    including
  • Attract investment
  • Promote an orderly industry structure and
    development for the provision and extension of
    services
  • Provide regulatory certainty by defining rights
    and obligations of licence holder (important for
    investment)
  • Define competitive framework (particularly where
    there is no strong competition legislation in
    place)
  • Establish basic rights (protection) of consumers
  • Establish enforcement procedures
  • Allocate scarce resources
  • Generate revenue

16
WTO Requirements for Licensing
  • The use of licensing for promotion orderly
    industry development and regulatory
    administration is recognised
  • Licensing must not be used for anti-competitive
    purposes
  • Must be transparent and fair
  • Specifically, the following are to be publicly
    available
  • All the licensing criteria
  • The period of time normally to reach a decision
    on the allocation of a licence
  • The terms and conditions of individual licences
  • In addition, the reasons for the denial of a
    licence are to be made known to an applicant upon
    request
  • Licence revocation and suspension procedures must
    be equally transparent and based on objective
    criteria

17
Independent Regulator
  • WTO reference paper requires the establishment of
    an independent regulator.
  • An independent regulator is separate from and not
    accountable to any supplier of basic
    telecommunications
  • does not mean independence from the laws and
    policies established by the government
  • Regulator is accountable to government or
    legislature for the performance of its mandate
  • The decisions and procedures of the regulator
    must be impartial with respect to all market
    participants
  • important to market confidence and promotion of
    investment
  • Need to avoid conflict of interest between the
    regulator and operators (including
    government-owned operators)
  • Regulators must not be appointed to the Board of
    directors or any other office in an operator or
    hold a financial or other interest

18
Regulatory Process
  • The regulatory process must be
  • Objective
  • Independent
  • Transparent and
  • Efficient
  • All decisions, rules procedures and notices
    should be publicly available
  • Operators should not have doubt on what their
    rights and obligations are
  • Desirable to consult publicly with interested
    parties on all proposed rules or major changes to
    existing rules
  • Independent appeal and dispute resolution
    arrangements

19
Regulatory Decisions Principles
  • Decisions are consistent with the regulators
    mandate
  • Government policy is properly applied
  • Must not be made at the direction of others
  • Decisions are made in good faith and for proper
    purposes
  • Decisions are reasonable
  • Only relevant matters are considered
  • Decisions are based on factual evidence
  • The reasons for a decision are made public
  • Affected parties are given the right to respond
    to evidence before a decision is made
  • Affected parties have the right to appeal
    regulatory decisions to a court or tribunal

20
Allocation of Scarce Resources
  • Each country may define its own policies for the
    allocation of scarce resources (e.g., spectrum,
    numbers and rights of way)
  • Procedures for the allocation of scarce resources
    must be
  • Objective
  • Timely
  • Transparent
  • Non-discriminatory.

21
Spectrum Licensing
  • The current spectrum allocation plan is to be
    made publicly available
  • Detailed identification of frequencies for
    specific government use is not required
  • Establish procedures for the allocation of
    frequencies to telecommunications operators
  • Terms and conditions of licences must be publicly
    available, objective and non-discriminatory
  • All rights and obligations of users must be
    clearly established
  • Terms and conditions of use of spectrum must be
    transparent

22
Telephone Numbers
  • Telephone numbers are a scarce resource
  • A numbering plan is to be made publicly available
  • Establish procedures for the allocation of
    numbers to operators
  • Terms and conditions of allocation must be
    publicly available, objective and
    non-discriminatory
  • Ensure equitable allocation of desirable numbers
    and access codes among operators

23
Conclusion
  • Regulation of telecommunications is directed at
  • Prevention of anti-competitive practices by major
    suppliers
  • Ensuring interconnection
  • Establishing a USO policy
  • Licensing may be used for orderly industry
    development and allocate scarce resources
  • All regulation (and Licensing) must be
  • Transparent
  • Objective, and
  • Non-discriminatory
  • Regulated charges must be cost-based
  • Independent regulator required to administer
    regulation
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