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Diversifying Participation in Network Development moving beyond the market. Study of India’s Universal Service Instruments Preliminary Findings Harsha de Silva and Payal Malik LIRNE asia , 20 May 2005, Colombo. Outline. Overview of the Regulatory and Policy Developments Status Access Gap
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Diversifying Participation in Network Development moving beyond the market Study of India’s Universal Service Instruments Preliminary Findings Harsha de Silva and Payal Malik LIRNEasia, 20 May 2005, Colombo
Outline • Overview of the Regulatory and Policy Developments • Status • Access Gap • Universal Service Instruments • Universal Service Fund: Progress and Issues • Conclusions on USF • ADC: Status and Issues • Conclusions on ADC • Discussion
Industry deregulation and liberalization Declining tariffs and handset prices Prepaid offerings Implementation of CPP regime Regulatory and Policy Developments of the Indian Telecom Sector: Diminishing Market Efficiency gaps Future • Comprehensive spectrum policy • Unified License Policy: • Sharing of backbone • Tax Policies: Onerous license fees • Number portability • Connectivity of Wireless operators to carry inter-circle calls 2003-05 • Unified access license regime introduced to enhance competition and create a level playing field • Transfer of Wireless licenses allowed among operators • Intra-circle Wireless mergers allowed • IUC regime implemented • Lowering of ADC from 30% to 10% of the revenue 1999-2002 • New Telecom Policy introduced • Entry of third and fourth operators in Wireless services • Free competition allowed in Wireline: WLL Introduced • NLD & ILD opened up to competition • First round of tariff rebalancing done: TTO • Operators moved from fixed to revenue-sharing license fee 1994-98 • TRAI established as an independent regulatory body • Wireless licenses allotted to private operators • Wireless services opened up to competition
Status • Telecom Sector: benchmark for other infrastructure sectors • Teledensity 2 percent in 2000 now close to 10 percent • Urban teledensity 26.2 vs. rural teledensity 1.74 • Increased focus on cellular mobile infrastructure deployment: 68.81 percent growth vs 6.6 percent • Rural DELs installed by BSNL through license fees relief • Roll Out Obligations failed
Access gap • 70% of population is rural: GDP per capita US $352 • High costs of extending network to uncovered areas • Current ARPU’s/EBITDA’s inadequate to fund capex required • 5000 urban agglomerates: Mobile coverage 50% • Growth will be driven not so much by falling tariffs: increasing geographical spread essential • Additional investments: mobilized through intervention • Market Failure Arguments
Universal Service • Efficiency Vs. Equity Grounds • USO a special case of redistributive pricing: Tariff Policy • Policies can be optimal in a second-best setting: more efficient policies like direct transfers • Traditional funding: unworkable competition drives down supercompetitive price
Funding Mechanisms • USO Fund (USF) • Access Deficit Charge (ADC) • Government Funding: Grants and License fee waiver • Roll-Out Obligations: Access Providers to cover 50% of DHQs and NLDOs to set-up POPs in every LDCA
USO Fund Policy • Came into effect from April 1, 2002 • USF: statutory non-lapsable Indian Telegraph (Amendment) Act, 2004 • Expediting disbursements effectuating universal service policy • Administration: a separate administrative organization attached office of the Department of Telecom • Disbursement through least cost subsidy auction: subventions placing companies in competition through a system of inverse bids
Costing Model: Determination of Benchmark • Benchmark: Reserve Price for invitation of bids • Evolving of benchmark for each activity for different areas • Fully allocated current costs: costs for bulk procurement of latest technology-based equipment Determination of Net Cost (NC) for new facilities • Net Cost = [ {Annualized Capital Recovery + Annual Operating Cost} - {Annual Revenue}] (Where Annualized Capital Recovery = Aggregate of depreciation + return on equity plus interest on Debt) • Different Approach: 8.6 million rural DELs installed prior to 1.4.2002 • Alternative Proxy cost model
Issues • Universal Access Vs. Universal Service: Payphones, broadband kiosks • Broaden the mandate: voice and low speed data to broadband connectivity • Technology “Neutrality” • Eligibility Criteria: Impact on the success of auctions, left huge rents for the incumbent • Costing Models and Auction Procedure • Market “Efficiency Gaps”: Regulatory levies • Spectrum Availability and Pricing • Sharing of Backbone
Conclusion of USF • Tend to be used by market players to extract too many concessions • Important strategic implications: effect the way firms compete against each other • Benefits from using auctions to assign USOs: difficult to have sufficient participants bidding against the incumbent • Asymmetry of information between the incumbents and new entrants • Financing these costs imposes distortions: try to minimize losses of allocative inefficiency
Background to ADC • Pre Reform • Cross subsidy from national and international LD tariffs • Reform • Falling prices in NLD, ILD, FL, WLL [M] and cellular • FL cannot sustain “social pricing” in rural areas; others have forbearance • Enter ADC • Normally [several other countries] a charge imposed on long-distance services and passed on to fixed-line access providers who are mandated to provide services below cost [but many are withdrawing ADC: US, UK, France, Canada, EU…] • Original implement date: 1 April 2003 • Implemented 1 May 2003
ADC ILD: Origination/Termination on FL: Rs 5.00/minute + 0.50 termination charge. None for WLL[M], Cellular
ADC • Objective is rapid growth in teledensity [affordable access to basic service NTPL 1999]; so cannot increase tariffs ADC until market is large [stable] enough to do without. • Total access deficit in FL INR 130b [USD 3b] • Applicable rental < cost based rental • Free calls • Below cost LD [0 – 50 km] • Calculated using a return of 14% ROCE • BSNL 2001/2 ROCE 7.5% • 2002/3 1.1% • ADC as a share of TR of Telco. Sector: Chile 2.0%, France 2.5%, US 6%, SA 0.3%, India 30%
ADC: original thinking • Together with IUC [carrier, termination] • Connecting fixed and all else • [1] Uniform charge and [2] escalating with distance • Assumed cost per FL INR 424/mo [BSNL ADC INR 296] • Wide variation of call charges: particularly if FL-FL • Advantage to WLL [M] and Cellular • ADC only if FL; favored cellular-cellular the most • Could not apply IUC+ADC charges, TRAI authorized below cost tariffs to keep FL [incumbent] in competition. [Not predatory pricing]. Other FL BSO also followed suit • ADC questioned
Problems • TRAI had created a unequal playing field by bringing in complex and confusing arguments to determine ADC • Technology matters; distance matters • Choice of regime [Distance does not matter] • Unsubstantiated costs etc • BSNL complained that while they were the largest service provider in rural [>30%] they had the highest AD, but TRAI in its calculations did not consider this fact and specified equal ADC [based on BSNL costs]. • Bias built in against FL • Cellular and WLL[M] was becoming much more competitive than FL • WLL[F] was considered FL
Problems continued • Consistency of IUC under various schedules • Who should get ADC • BSNL • Others? • Below cost FL tariffs [to compete with Cellular and WLL] and its sustainability • Vicious circle cost is high; but keep tariff below cost to compete; deficit; apply ADC; high ADC makes FL less competitive; higher deficit… • Cost of NLD carriage > than TRAI specified cost • IUC of INR 5.50/min termination of IT grey market • Led to May 2003 Consultation
Led to 2003 May consultation • Reassess ADC regime • Should BSNL and other BSO be given ADC? • given their urban presence and • unmet roll out • Should ADC be linked to roll-out? • Should ADC on ILD be reduced to discourage grey traffic? • Should ADC have a cut off date and/or merged with the USO regime?
2003 May Consultation • Was the calculation method correct [BSNL hist. avg]? Why not FLLRIC to account for technology change? • FLLRIC is necessary; but a single year shift would impact heavily on BSNL. So stick to historical [but 2002/3] audited BSNL a/c • However, BSNL shifting to lower cost wireless technology • Over a few years ADC to be merged with USO • GOI grants to BSNL for rural telecom need to be factored in the calculations of ADC • Reimbursement of license fees • Moratorium on capital and interest payments • Maximum 10% dividend etc. lower WACC lower ROCE
2003 May Consultation • Use of cost estimates and minutes of others [not BSNL] not yet possible • Un-audited • Inconsistent, but higher cost compared to BSNL [even MTNL] • In some cases “extreme” and “absurd” • Net AD for BSNL INR 53b [including GOI comp.] • ADC for others higher with their own data, but lower with normalized for BSNL • Consider linking ADC to roll-out • For BSNL and MTNL cover costs from high growth cellular [zero entry fee]
Revised ADC mechanism • Paid to all BSO on a per minute basis • Paid by Basic, Cellular, National LD, International LD service providers • ADC for fixed line operator or BSNL
Revised ADC • Implement date 1 Dec 2003; delayed 15 Dec 2003; delayed 1 Feb 2004 • ADC is lower [include GOI support to BSNL] • Shall fund INR 53.4b • Scrap 2 ADC regimes; stick to escalating ADC • Applicable to all calls except FL-FL, 0-50km intra circle, intra circle Cellular/WLL[M] to C/W[M] • Non BSNL to keep ADC, but less than BSNL [limited for of IUC] • Originating: keep ADC • Terminating: keep ADC + Termination charge • No WLL[M]/Cellular to-from WLL[M]/Cellular
Cont… Revised ADC • ADC to be merged with USO in 3-5 years • All intra-circle INR 0.30 per minute; inter-circle INR 0.30, 0.50 or 0.80 • Earlier 92% of ADC funded by BSO [BSNL]; 40% as proportion of revenue. Now down to 12% of revenue for FL, 9% for Cellular and 16% for WLL. • In the future possibilities of ADC as a percentage of revenue?
Consultation June 2004 • Serious implementation problems • Payments not made • Data questionable [INR 0.30 – 0.80, 4.25 for ILD] • Technical problems due to distance measures • BSNL billing system delays have made problem worse • Bypass [cannot identify calls from other networks] • Consider a simpler approach • Not distance based • Not call based
Proposed new ADC • ADC period • 10/2004 to 9/2005 • Revenue share • Less complex and easier to implement • Revenues for relevant period • [avg. subscriber base march 2005] X [monthly ARPU] • At INR 200/mo rental 2.2% • At INR 156/mo rental 5.3%
Revenue share ADC shot down • Amendments to Rev Share ADC calculation rejected • Currently main ADC contributor ILD, if Rev. Share, tariff on local calls will increase; drop in ILD illogical • ADC rev share would be on top of already rev share license fee • Later possible with increasing minutes and lower ILD share • New ADC from 1 February 2005 [previous method] • Given exceptionally high growth in minutes ADC per minute reduced, but total ADC unchanged • Only BSNL will receive ADC on incoming ILD and outgoing Cellular/WLL[M]. Others can on outgoing. • Over time USO will increase and ADC will decrease merge
Expectation • Huge increase in traffic, so can bring down ADC per minute and still provide BSNL annually INR 50b in ADC. • Largest drop is in ILD 60% [attempt to check the grey market; private ISD call cost to drop by 11%, BSNL by 24%]. NLD 40% • Example AirTel to US: INR 16/min 14.24/min • BSNL: INR 7.20/min 5.45/min • Migrating to a Revenue Share and merged USO regime
Again, consultation March 2005 • Yet another consultation in March 2005 • Should ADC be restricted to rural FL? • Tariff ceiling only on Rural FL, AD very high in R-FL
Consultation March 2005 • Should ADC be available to non-BSNL? • Actually no. No deficit once local call surplus is considered. But given part [outgoing ADC] now. • Why ADC for wireless access? [WLL[F] can be moved around just like WLL[M] or Cellular] • Private operators 80% fixed access through WLL[F] • Lower last mile cost, higher equipment cost [?] • But cannot distinguish b/w FL and WLL[F] so kept WLL[F] in ADC • Moving to Rev. Share • With reduced ILD ADC, and increasing overall minutes along with uniform ADC for domestic calls can TRAI shift to rev share?
Current status • 183 pages of responses [posted 17 May 2005?]. Summary of main responses… • BSNL opposes the ADC reduction • “telecom provider of last resort!” • Annual revenue loss of INR 12.5b [TRAI calculations] • INR 79b [BSNL calculations]; arrears INR 110b • WL service totally unviable • TRAI too many consultations; confusion • TRAI not submitted calculations non-transparent • ADC includes self-funding [calls w/in network 80%] but should be Net ADC [from external networks] • Also oppose revenue share • Higher local call costs
Current status • MTNL argues for urban ADC • Delhi, Mumbai 92% basic service [large legacy network]; annual loss INR 10.8b serving the urban poor [at below cost rental] without full ADC [INR 4.5b annually elsewhere] • But, no revenue share • Lower ILD loss of forex., foreign carriers benefit • Tata/VSNL • In principle “market forces” but given social obligation need ADC support • Combine USO+ADC and subsidize all “below cost” service by everyone. • BSNL/MTNL got free entry to cellular; license fees reimbursed by budget grant etc. • WLL[F] is the way forward in rural in the future; need ADC support • TRAI does not create competition in FL
Current status • Reliance • No justification for ADC in India; if ADC then should be uniform across services and operators • No economic rationale’ [only notional] • Can apply only for FL in “rural area” • But BSNL earns revenue from various services, not stand alone [unfair advantage for BSNL] • Tariffs are based on forbearance except for rural FL • Define AD [rural access or affordable access] • Define “rural area” • Phase out ADC; USO is sufficient to meet social, economic and national objectives
Issues • BSNL network is unviable, they did spend enormous amount then, but • Should it be sustained at such a cost • Why cannot it be funded through [simpler] USO • All non-rural users [via operators] pay for rural roll out. • Why bias towards FL? • Is ADC paying for “technology mistakes of BSNL”? • Why not technology neutrality • Open doors for options such as Wi-Fi and Wi-Max also • ADC “grey market”
Issues • Regulation should not hinder development through technological advancement and market forces • “Whenever there is a conflict between dumb regulation and consumer benefit, it is regulation that should yield space, not the consumer”[ET editorial 24 March 2005]
ADC in sum • Conceptually complicated • Objective not clear [definition; basic?] • Technology bias that defeats the purpose • Encourages parallel markets [by-pass] • Design flawed • Need detailed information from commercial entities • Junk in junk out • Nightmare to implement • Keep changing rules of the game [2003 May, 2004 Feb, 2005 Feb, 2005 when again…] ~ not conducive for business • Should be merged with USO on a simple, technology neutral, revenue share model
Contacts • www.lirneasia.net • Harsha de Silva • hdes1@yahoo.com • Payal Malik • payal.malik@gmail.com