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Regulation & investment: Sri Lanka case study. Rohan Samarajiva & Sabina Fernando Samarajiva@lirne.net ; fernando@lirne.net September 17, 2004, Mount Lavinia. Agenda. Thumbnail of Sri Lanka telecom sector Duration of reforms & data availability make Sri Lanka a good case
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Regulation & investment: Sri Lanka case study Rohan Samarajiva & Sabina Fernando Samarajiva@lirne.net; fernando@lirne.net September 17, 2004, Mount Lavinia
Agenda • Thumbnail of Sri Lanka telecom sector • Duration of reforms & data availability make Sri Lanka a good case • Overall pattern of investments in network • Relation to worldwide trends • Fixed sector: telecom regulatory environment and investment 1993-2002 • Mobile sector: telecom regulatory environment and investment 1993-2002 • Conclusions
Mileposts in telecom reform • 1980: bifurcation of posts & telecom • 1989: first mobile license • 1991: new law; Office of Director General of Telecom; corporatization of incumbent • 1996-97: two fixed operators licensed; regulator strengthened • 1997: Partial privatization & ceding of management of incumbent to NTT • 2002-03: End of international “exclusivity” & licensing of 30+ int’l operators
Market structure at end 2002 • 3 fixed operators (incumbent 86% market share) • 4 mobile operators (largest =54% market share) • 5 facilities based data operators • 20+ non-facilities based data ops • 30+ external gateway operators • 1 trunk mobile operator • 1 specialized infrastructure provider
Fixed lines 20.9% CAGR (1997-2002) 7th highest Mobile connections 52% CAGR (97-02) 380,000 waiters in 2004 (43% of total fixed subscribers--890,000) Growth, demand, etc.
Macro-level or country Regulatory, and Commercial Focus here on subset of regulatory risk, described as “telecom regulatory environment” Areas affected by actions of telecom regulatory entities Risk affecting investment
TRE assessment • Done as a pilot, with panel by Fernando et al. in September 2004 • Expert assessment done for earlier version • Overall shape of the panel and expert assessments not very different, but panel is harsher in judgment; expert is a little more volatile but generous • 1993-96 TRE not done • Because decisions not affected by regulatory environment when government is sole supplier
Mobile sector TRE • Again, overall shapes are similar, but panel is harsh compared to expert • Agreement that interconnection is where TRE is worst, except for the expert who gives high marks for mobile interconnection in 1997-99
Overall patterns, fixed • Highest investments around entry of 2 new operators • Incumbent investments decline sharply since 1999 peak • Tapering off of govt on-lending • Massive bypass; vindictiveness • No investment brought in by NTT • Interconnection determination appealed; legal uncertainty • Questionable MOU increases revenues but does not induce investment
Overall patterns, mobile • Fluctuations driven primarily by standards-related investments and new entry • ETACS and AMPS GSM • Private investment (primarily mobile) overtakes incumbent investments in 2001 • Massive investment commitments (USD 300m) announced in past 12 months, primarily by mobiles • Allowed to carry international traffic March 2003 • 1800 MHz auction in 2003 April
Concluding comments • TRE methodology has significant potential • Contrast of fixed and mobile TREs and investment patterns suggest a causal relation • Of course affected by macro factors: airport attack in 2001 and ceasefire from 2002 Feb had major effects