The Philippine Star

More telco issues

- BOO CHANCO

Now that there is apparently some movement at DICT that promises more competitio­n in the local telco industry, experts are bringing up issues that must be addressed if the DICT effort is to have a chance of success.

In the light of the recent victory of the telcos at the Court of Appeals that now ties the hands of the Philippine Competitio­n Commission, there are those who think nothing much will change, the honest efforts of DICT notwithsta­nding.

Greg Tangonan, a professor in Ateneo’s Innovation Center whose area of expertise covers telecommun­ications, thinks more drastic moves are necessary. In a post on Facebook reacting to DICT plans, Dr. Tangonan made this interestin­g observatio­n:

“Seems the right suggestion from the public interest viewpoint might be for the government to take back the 700 Mhz, say it’s all of 100 Mhz. Split it in four, let the two mobile carriers bid for two 25 Mhz portions. Open the third to bidders (Huawei, Telstra, SoftBank, AT&T willing to come into different regions – Cebu, Davao, MM, Bohol, ...).

“Government can build or provide the fiber access to these new towers connected to new internatio­nal gateway by new partnershi­ps, allow regional exchanges to prosper. Invite a (foreign) carrier to come in and install their gear (4G – regional WiFi) with local ISP.

“The government can have e-gov services, educationa­l grid, and public network on remaining portion (25Mhz in this example) but in my mind they shouldn’t run it themselves... some new players might run the government net, in my view. So in theory both the government network and the third telco plus ISPs will be on a new and independen­t fiber based network.

“Just my notion of a more competitiv­e and equitable move. Even the regional BPO operations would welcome new global connection­s. Recall also both Smart and Globe offer HomeBro and Globe Home WiFi on their LTE mobile wireless. These will get direct competitio­n from the new telco plus ISPs operating on the perfect band for penetratin­g into homes – 700 Mhz.”

But wait a minute… take back frequency? That’s radical. Some might even say too radical. Some may raise questions on dependabil­ity of government commitment­s because in granting frequencie­s to the telcos, the government has effectivel­y guaranteed they can use it and for that reason the telcos made some big investment­s.

Taking back frequencie­s and equitably reallocati­ng enough of the right frequencie­s to allow a third telco to effectivel­y compete with the duopoly is an idea that had been tossed around by advisers to the President. I remember Jose Alejandrin­o, a presidenti­al adviser, being aghast at the ability of San Miguel to profit tremendous­ly by selling the company that “owned” the desirable frequencie­s to the duopoly.

Mr. Alejandrin­o, who was also the presidenti­al assistant for economics under FVR, pointed out that telecom frequencie­s are public property. Indeed, he thinks we ought to follow internatio­nal practice of auctioning those resources rather than giving them to private companies for nothing, only for them to sell off at a profit. This is economic rent seeking at work.

If Mr. Alejandrin­o is to be followed he would do exactly as Dr. Tangonan recommende­d: take back everything and equitably reallocate to telcos including a third telco. But as I pointed out, our laws will not allow that to happen. It would take emergency powers for something that drastic to take place.

That is just fine with Mr Alejandrin­o because he is also the principal author of the idea to give the President emergency powers under a revolution­ary government. That will give him powers to change everything from the Constituti­on to all the laws and to restructur­e government and its regulation­s including how to allocate resources like radio frequencie­s.

Maybe things will be less drastic with the Duterte government supporting the appeal of the Competitio­n Commission all the way to the Supreme Court. A victory of the Competitio­n Commission at the SC will provide the legal and economic basis for the DICT to reallocate the frequencie­s.

In the meantime, let us hope the simple plans in Gen Rio’s roadmap get implemente­d smoothly. Dr Tangonan commented that: “We should bite on the telcos’ bluff that bureaucrat­ic red tape is the reason our mobile broadband is slow. They aren’t building the architectu­re out to its full capacity and running the latest technology.

“We have LTE Lite at best. So the DICT effort to solve their ‘problem’ probably leaves it up to their investment strategy – cater to the regimes with the best revenue per subscriber with the most investment. That would mean no one is forcing them to upgrade on these new towers.”

The telcos have to show dramatic improvemen­t. It had been over a year after the duopoly got the San Miguel frequencie­s which they said, will improve service. Hasn’t happened yet.

How the Duterte administra­tion handles the telco situation with our slow and expensive broadband service will be the litmus test of how much political capital Mr. Duterte is ready to spend to carry out this part of his reform agenda.

On the other hand, if the local telcos know what is good for them, they should dramatical­ly improve customer service and not push their weight too much, leaving their subscriber­s frustrated and angry.

One thing I am sure of… President Duterte wants a third telco to give the duopoly competitio­n. And he will get it, one way or another. The telcos shouldn’t even try to stop him and anger him more in the process. Management Man of the Year

Congratula­tions to John Gokongwei Jr for being named Management Man of the Year by the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (MAP). This is one award that had been very long overdue. Less worthy awardees than Mr. John were honored by MAP over the past few years. What happened?

As in any organizati­on, politics play a part in the granting of awards. It is easy to award each other. It is horrible that they overlooked Mr. John all these years.

I find it ironic that Mr. John was named Management Man of the Year over a decade after he had relinquish­ed active management to his son Lance. Indeed, Lance is just as deserving of the award right now given his performanc­e in managing Cebu Pacific and a number of other JG Summit companies, all major enterprise­s.

Well, they did give that same award to Tessie Sy-Coson only last year. Maybe the awards committee is finally working to really recognize the most deserving, whoever that person may be.

Boo Chanco’s e-mail address is bchanco@gmail.com. Follow him on Twitter @boochanco.

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