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Global Trends in Regulation

Global Trends in Regulation . Dr. Abdelfattah ABUQAYYAS ICT/HRD Consultant. Telecom Market on the Move Competition. Effective Regulation. Private Ownership. Sector Reform. Sector Reform. Regulation in an Era of Convergence.

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Global Trends in Regulation

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  1. Global Trends in Regulation Dr. Abdelfattah ABUQAYYAS ICT/HRD Consultant

  2. Telecom Market on the MoveCompetition

  3. Effective Regulation

  4. Private Ownership

  5. Sector Reform

  6. Sector Reform

  7. Regulation in an Era of Convergence • Flexibility & forward-looking approach being adapted world wide, but tailored to local circumstances • Technological and Service Convergence • Deployment of Next Generation Access Networks • Functional or Structural Separation • Infrastructure sharing • Transparency and accountability • Adoption and enforcing of clear rules • Complexity vs. simplicity (Interconnection…) • International cooperation • Bundling of Services • Changing focus: • From regulating voice to regulating data services, multimedia, broadcasting: regulatory parity • From regulating multiple services over multiple delivery platforms, towards regulating NGN • From regulating PSTN to regulating IP • From heavy-handed regulation to light-touch approach, but also functional separation

  8. Regulation Needs to Go Further:a 2nd wave to spur broadband • Furthering liberalization • End of exclusivity periods of state-owned incumbent operators • Liberalizing spectrum management • Liberalizing international gateways and creating IXPs • Promoting open access to fiber backbones • Enhancing competition • Interconnection & price regulation • More flexible licensing practices (general authorizations and unified licenses) • Infrastructure sharing & open access • Extending access beyond the market (innovative business models, small-scale deployments, etc.) • Transposing models from developed countries in the developing world to extend access to all

  9. Functional Separation • A new kind of re-structuring? • Separation of legacy fixed line operators’ non-replicable or bottleneck assets into a new business division which provides wholesale access • This wholesale access division is kept separate from the incumbent’s own retail divisions • Australia, Ireland, Italy, Mongolia, New Zealand, Sweden and U.K.

  10. Licensing • Technology and service neutrality • Transparency (criteria, procedure time, terms, etc.) • Expansion in the number of services that are subject to only minimal or even no licensing, and • Development of converged licensing frameworks that break down traditional service-based and technology-based licensing distinctions. • Ensuring a level playing field between legacy operators and new market players • What about Voice over IP?

  11. Interconnection Trends • Who has to provide? • Different countries may require interconnection from incumbents or dominant operators or operators with SMP • Increasingly, countries take a technology neutral approach and impose interconnection obligations on all network operators • Still asymmetric regulation places heavier interconnection obligations placed on major suppliers • When is it provided? • Immediately through Reference Interconnection Offer Deadlines (e.g. 3 to 6 months from time of request) • How much does it cost? • Cost-oriented rates, using fully allocated costs, LRIC or others • Benchmarking • Privately negotiated • What information is available? • Role of regulators' websites to publish RIOs • Dispute settlement

  12. What interconnection information is made publicly available?

  13. IXPs and International Gateway Liberalization

  14. Universal Access • Universal Service Obligation • Traditional Approach Implemented By Placing Obligations on Fixed Line Monopoly Operator • Goal: universal household connections • Largely achieved in developed world • Universal Access Opportunity • First step: Sector reform measures • Use of funds and smart subsidies combined with competitive auctions • Goal: promote public access to un-served areas • Mobile communications have reached more voice users than through fixed line USO programs • New steps needed to promote broadband

  15. Competition Price and Technology • Competitive bidding keeps subsidy, if any, low • Lack of competition for access services will impact financial viability • Price of services to end users and from incoming calls can make or break financial viability • Technology choice can push forward the envelope of financial sustainability and affordability

  16. Towards the second wave of sector reform • Liberalize the international gateways and VoIP to promote IP services • Leverage on the success in the mobile market to migrate to IMT technologies • Leapfrog to fiber backbone and backhaul networks, by providing financial and fiscal incentives to encourage the deployment of backbone infrastructure • Create national IXPs • Continue to use market liberalization and competition as a forcefor development • Think outside the box • Encouraging network deployment with incentives • Supporting small-scale deployment in rural areas • Using infrastructure sharing and open access models to promote deployment • Promote cross-border harmonization for issues like international mobile roaming • Remember where we started? . . . Convergence! • First steps taken to address convergence; new issues arising fornew applications and services like IPTV and mobile broadcasting

  17. Six Degrees of Sharing Innovative infrastructure sharing and open access strategies to promote affordable access for all What do we Mean by 6 Degrees of Sharing? The 8th Global Symposium for Regulators (GSR) explored a range of regulatory and policy sharing measures that both developed and developing countries can implement to ensure that all people on earth are connected to ICT networks offering affordable broadband services. The sharing options can be used alone or in combination, mixing and matching regulatory initiatives to achieve desired policy objectives.

  18. Why Share • Cost is the single biggest reason to share • Developing countries seek to leverage mobile infrastructure boom into mobile broadband boom • Developing countries also seek to build IP based backbone and backhaul networks • Developed countries seek to leverage fixed line investments and upgrade to Fiber to Home. • Both share the same goal: to expand network deployment and development by cutting costs

  19. How to Share • Share some infrastructure but still compete on services • Conditions required: Political commitment (WSIS Principles), and clear regulatory framework in particular those related to interconnection. • Principles: Site-Sharing, Co-location, Connection service to Mobile and/or Fiber and/or Satellite networks providing int’l gateway facilities

  20. Time is Right • Sharing TODAY before TOMORROW 􀂃 • Monopolies are gone • Regulators prepare 2nd Shock -wave of reforms where the central point will be “sharing strategy” • Impossibility to ignore the tremendous perspectives of Collective surplus for national treasuries (via regulators) and profits for Operators

  21. 6 Degrees What it is: What it’s not: An attempt to put infrastructure back in the hands of monopoly providers or to stifle competition (Sharing’s not possible if there’s only one player!) A strategy to lessen competition or to sell less equipment About markets not working Limiting consumer choices A limit on facilities-based competition • Using infrastructure sharing together with Universal Access strategies within a competitive framework • Reducing costs • Allow new players to provide broadband • Relying on time-tested competition principles • About allowing markets to work • Consumers getting service

  22. Different Degrees of Sharing • From basic interconnection regulation to local loop unbundling to functional separation? • Functional separation versus open access? • Adapting practices designed for different goals, e.g. tower sharing for environmental goals for universal access goals

  23. Global Trends in Regulation THANK YOU Dr. Abdelfattah ABUQAYYAS ICT/HRD Consultant

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