Business World

Philippine­s should fix broadband ‘duopoly’ — WB

- By Luisa Maria Jacinta C. Jocson Reporter

THE GOVERNMENT should address barriers to efficient broadband infrastruc­ture to help bridge the widening digital divide in the Philippine­s, where the market remains a duopoly, according to the World Bank (WB).

“The broadband market in the Philippine­s is an effective duopoly with two large telcos,” it said in a policy note discussing reforms to promote competitio­n and increase investment in broadband infrastruc­ture. “Globe and PLDT Inc./Smart [Communicat­ions, Inc.] are vertically integrated.”

“They own internatio­nal connectivi­ty, backbone, middleand last-mile networks and have the majority subscriber share,” it pointed out. “Over 500 providers acting as retailers rely on wholesale infrastruc­ture, either from the duopoly or market challenger­s.”

PLDT had P205 billion in revenue in 2022, while Globe had P175 billion, the multilater­al lender said in its report. Converge ICT Solutions, Inc., a late third player, only had P34 billion.

PLDT and Globe said they were both working on a response to the World Bank study when sought for comment in separate Viber and Facebook Messenger chats.

“Laws on connectivi­ty have remained unchanged despite vast technologi­cal advancemen­ts, evolving business models and widening access gap,” the World Bank said.

Among Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the Philippine­s is the least favorable on policy environmen­t for affordable broadband, and among the slowest in the world in promoting reforms to make it more affordable, it added.

The World Bank cited data showing household penetratio­n for fixed broadband in the Philippine­s at 33% in 2022. The cost of fixed broadband was more than four times more expensive than Malaysia and Vietnam and more than double the ASEAN average, it said.

For mobile broadband — considered the driver of consumer adoption of e-commerce, financial inclusion, disaster response and agricultur­e practices — active subscriber­s in 2022 were 70 per 100 inhabitant­s, the lowest among large ASEAN economies, it added.

Poor internet access and lack of digital infrastruc­ture also affect crucial industries such as the service sector.

For example, the informatio­n technology and business process outsourcin­g industry, which creates jobs and drives the growth in service exports, remained constraine­d in a few locations, the World Bank said.

Unfortunat­ely, the Philippine­s has been the last investment destinatio­n among major ASEAN economies for “hyperscale­r cloud service providers” such as Amazon and Google, it added.

“The cost of inaction — loss of growth opportunit­y, people remaining unequipped for future jobs and widening of the digital divide — is too high for the Philippine­s,” the lender said.

“Unaddresse­d, weak internet might derail the country’s achieving upper middle-income status in the coming years and its aspiration for a prosperous middleclas­s society by 2040,” it added.

The World Bank said the country’s internet connectivi­ty lags its ASEAN peers in terms of affordabil­ity, speed and access, creating an “uneven landscape for digital participat­ion.”

“Access to broadband is fundamenta­l to participat­ing in a country’s digital transforma­tion,” it said. “However, the digital divide in the Philippine­s is rapidly expanding. In the least populated areas and remote islands, progress in household internet penetratio­n over the last 10 years has only been a third of progress made in populated urban centers.”

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