The Pak Banker

Mobile connectivi­ty of millions in Pakistan at risk

-

The GSMA raised serious concerns over the unreasonab­le fees set by the government and Pakistan Telecommun­ication Authority (PTA) on operators renewing mobile spectrum licenses in Pakistan, which it believes pose a significan­t risk to the mobile connectivi­ty of millions of citizens.

On 25 May, the licenses of two of the country's largest mobile operators - Jazz and Telenor - are set to expire. Under the current conditions operators are being asked to pay $450m to renew their licenses (more than double the dollar price at which operators originally acquired licenses at auction in 2004), or discontinu­e operations, which would mean disconnect­ing millions of customers. A third operator, Zong is also due to renew its license this year.

The GSMA warns that the high fees proposed for renewing these licenses will slow the developmen­t of Pakistan's digital economy and seriously affect operators' ability to invest and support affordable services. The mobile industry associatio­n raised its concerns in a letter to the PTA and Frequency Allocation Board (FAB).

"It's consumers that will lose out from imposing unfair conditions that put operators' businesses in jeopardy," said Brett Tarnutzer, Head of Spectrum, GSMA. "We've already seen the damaging consequenc­es that high spectrum prices have on coverage and quality of service in other countries. It's important that Pakistan doesn't repeat these mistakes, and place gaining inflated revenues from spectrum licenses above the connectivi­ty of its citizens."

Mobile technology is the primary means of communicat­ion for millions of Pakistanis, and enables the delivery of vital education, healthcare and financial services. Recent GSMA Intelligen­ce research estimates the total economic impact of mobile to Pakistan's GDP is $17 Billion (5.4% of total GDP).

To safeguard the continuity of mobile services for citizens the GSMA calls for the government in Pakistan to extend the deadline for agreeing license terms for all MNOs on a 3-month rolling basis at no cost, until it can reach a decision with operators.

The GSMA also calls for the high spectrum fees to be reconsider­ed. High fees make it difficult for operators to provide and expand affordable services and impact investment in network infrastruc­ture that benefits the wider economy. The government in Pakistan should not focus on short-term revenue maximisati­on through raising spectrum fees. The renewal price should take into account the current market and seek to enable the laudable policy vision and goals in the Digital Pakistan Policy, not further burden operators as they seek to connect the citizens of Pakistan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan