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Key Regulatory concerns India

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Flexibility - as market matures. Preparing the ground with ... Cumulative losses of mobile telephony ~Rs.7,000 Crore. Sector in courts - no ongoing investment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Key Regulatory concerns India


1
Key Regulatory concerns India
  • By
  • Pradip Baijal
  • Chairman
  • Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
  • 6th SATRC Meeting, Islamabad, 22.09.04

2
The Indian Story
Competition Phases of Policy reforms
First phase of reform
Second phase of reform
Third phase of reform
Converged framework
Manufacturing Sector Value Added Services
NTP 1994 Duopoly / Oligopoly in Services
sector Bidding for Licenses Independent
regulator
NTP 1999 Open competition Revenue
sharing Separation of operator and policy
maker Privatisation of incumbent CPP Lowering
ADC
  • Unified Licensing Regime
  • Unified Access Licensing Regime already
    implemented
  • Converged Ministry of ICT
  • Communication Convergence Bill 2000

3
Competition
  • The task of the Regulator is to promote
    competition
  • Non discrimination
  • Timely Action
  • Flexibility - as market matures
  • Preparing the ground with various policies
  • to address regulatory issues

4
What we did in the recent past
  • Introduction of Calling Party Pays
  • Encouraged aggressive competition.
  • ADC lowered from 30 of sectoral revenue to below
    10
  • Finalisation of IUC regime tailored to facilitate
    ongoing convergence.
  • Encouraged Handset price reduction by permitting
    bundling of handsets with tariff.
  • General tariff forbearance, in view of intense
    competition.
  • Migration to UASL.

5
What was achieved
GROWTH IN CELLULAR SUBSCRIBER BASE WITH FALL IN
TARIFFS
Cellular subscribers and effective tariff per
minute
Lowering of ADC from 30 to 10 of sector revenue
NTP-99
Telecom Tariff Order
CPP introduced
3rd 4th cellular operator
WLL introduced
6
Past Present and Future
  • Cumulative losses of mobile telephony Rs.7,000
    Crore
  • Sector in courts - no ongoing investment
  • Number of mobile telephones 13 million after
    eight years of mobile telephony

Last Year
  • Sector in profits
  • No court cases - huge ongoing investment
  • 33.6 million mobile telephones, 12.7 times growth
    than the earlier average yearly growth.
  • To reach 100 million mobile subscribers in two
    years
  • Similar success in broadband. Key Low entry cost
    and exciting tariff

This Year
We now Dream
7
Regulatory Issues addressed by TRAI
Regulatory Tool Box
USO
Comprehensive USO Policy in place
Issues have been addressed through various
regulations and directives One of the few
countries to publish RIO A comprehensive IUC
regime too is in place
Interconnection
Telecom Tariff Order amendments De-regulation
tariffs, starting with cellular
tariffs Monitoring of tariffs
Tariffs
Based on TRAI recommendations, open competition
has been introduced in all sectors including
unified access. ( except Cellular where
there is frequency limitation)
Licensing
End User Quality of Service regulation, Publicly
available customer survey
QoS
Accounting separation, RIO by service providers
with Significant Market Power, Merger issues,
Provide flexible license conditions
Competition
8
Key ongoing Regulatory Issues
  • Issues relating to Unified license
  • Interconnection
  • Spectrum management
  • Access Deficit Charges
  • Tariff rebalancing
  • Quality of Service
  • Internet and Broadband penetration
  • Accounting Separation
  • Rural connectivity
  • Number Portability

9
Unified Licensing
  • Why Unified Licensing
  • To encourage flexible and efficient growth of
    new applications and services
  • Simplify licensing procedure, make operations
    easy
  • Reduce legal disputes
  • Easy entry and fair transition to the new
    regime.
  • Encourage efficient small operators to cover
    rural, remote and telecommunication facilities
    wise less developed areas.
  • Unified Access License Regime introduced.
  • Full Unified Licensing Regime is under
    consideration.

10
Interconnection Issues
11
Concerns related to Interconnection in
Multi-Operator Multi-Service environment
  • Timely availability of Interconnection from the
    Incumbent
  • Point of Interconnection and Point of Handover
  • Inter carrier billing
  • Complexity in settlement of interconnect usage
    charges
  • Sharing of Intelligent Network Platform

12
Spectrum Management
  • Spectrum is key to growth and spread of telecom
    service in our country in view of,
  • Most of the growth coming from mobile.
  • New mobile technologies emerging which benefit us
    in various ways.

13
Concerns in Spectrum management
  • Efficient utilisation of spectrum
  • Spectrum allocation procedure
  • Spectrum pricing
  • Final Recommendations on
  • these issues are under process

14
Access Deficit Charges
  • Relevance in today's scenario

15
Access Deficit Charges
  • Sharp decline in the prevailing tariffs reducing
    scope to give cross subsidy from long distance
    traffic.
  • Need to compensate the access deficit for fixed
    line.

16
Key Concerns of ADC
  • Amount of ADC
  • Period of ADC
  • Applicability of ADC amount on types of services
  • Should not create regulatory incentive/
    disincentive to any service.
  • Who should get the ADC funding
  • Mechanisms for collection and distribution of the
    ADC amounts
  • Review of existing ADC regime is under process

17
Current Regulatory concerns Tariff related
18
Vertical Price Squeeze An Anti-Competitive
Conduct
  • Charging unreasonably High prices for supply of
    critical inputs to competitors is a competition
    limiting activity.
  • And setting wholesale prices for key inputs
    higher than the retail prices is an
    anti-competitive conduct.
  •  TRAI does not allow vertical price squeeze

19
Quality of Service Issues
20
Challenges to QoS implementation
  • There is a need to have a Legal / Policy
    framework so as to impart QoS an enforceable
    status
  • QoS definitions in the area of converged
    technologies are still emerging
  • Customer satisfaction is difficult to measure
    from performance statistics requires a
    subjective survey
  • Necessary to build an effective feedback
    mechanism
  • Providing QoS assurances in the current mixed
    environment is exceedingly difficult. Each
    service type has a different concept of what
    constitutes high quality

21
Internet and Broadband Penetration
22
OVERALL ICT PENETRATION IN INDIA STILL LAGS
BEHIND OTHER COUNTRIES
Key internet and broadband indicators
End of year 2003
Korea
Malaysia
India
China
Parameters
26
12
0.4
2.5
Internet connections per
100 persons
25
0.4
0.02
1.4
Broadband connections
per 100 persons
0.05
0.56
0.33
0.96
Ratio of Broadband to
Internet Connections
Ratio of internet connections
0.3
0.8
0.9
0.5
to PCs
0.25
15.63
3.07
Charges per 100 kbps ( per month)
7.61
965
4,000
10,000
GDP (US Per capita)
465
month (US)
23
Broadband - Success Factors for Development
  • Educating the public about Broadband.
  • Competition Pro-competitive Regulation.
  • Innovations and alternate Technologies.
  • Applications and Content.
  • Price and Affordability.
  • Governments support to promote Broadband.
  • Innovative marketing.
  • Recommendations on broadband have been sent to
    the Government

24
Accounting Separation
  • Accounting Separation is significant from the
    regulatory perspective in a multi service, multi
    operator environment
  • It creates capability to analyse costs,
    revenues, and capital employed in major areas of
    an operators business.
  • Identifying cross subsidisation, Investigating
    predatory pricing, discrimination and other
    anti-competitive conduct.
  • TRAI had issued Regulation on accounting
    Separation to call for audited repots on
    Separated Accounts

25
RURAL CONNECTIVITY
26
RURAL CONNECTIVITY
27
Improving Cellular Coverage
  • 200 million urban population covering 1700 towns.
  • 55-60 of rural areas to be covered by 2006
    accounting for 75 of Population.
  • Source As per information given by operators

28
TO INCREASE RURAL CONNECTIVITY
NEW PROPOSALS
  • Need to improve use of existing Assets
  • Improving Cellular Coverage
  • Niche Operators
  • Reduction in provisioning costs

29
RURAL INDIA CAN BE TRANSFORMED
  • AFFORDABLE SHARED ACCESS TO WORLD-WIDE-WEB
    THROUGH
  • COMMUNITY INTERNET KIOSKS
  • ENABLE E-GOVERNMENCE THROUGH EASY ACCESS TO
    CITIZEN
  • SERVICES IN TRANSPARENT SPEEDY MANNER
  • CREATE RURAL MICRO ENTERPRISES AND ENHANCE RURAL
    GDP
  • MAKE RURAL PEOPLE BETTER EDUCATED THROUGH
    E-LEARNING
  • PROVIDE BETTER ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES
    THROUGH TELE-
  • MEDICINE AND E-HEALTH
  • ENABLE FARMERS TO GET TIMELY INFORMATION ABOUT
    DEMAND OPTIMUM PRICE FOR THEIR PRODUCTS
  • GENERATE EMPLOYMENT DIRECTLY IN INTERNET KIOSKS
    AND BY
  • PROVIDING VOCATIONAL TRAINING
  • PROVIDE INFORMATION AND DIGITAL ENTERTAINMENT
    SERVICES TO THE RURAL MASSES

30
NUMBER PORTABILITY
  • Type Of Service
  • Only Fixed
  • Only Mobile
  • Both
  • Implementation Of Portability
  • Service area wise
  • National Level
  • Type Of Portability
  • Operator Wise
  • Location Wise
  • Service wise

31
Thank You
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