The Citizen (Gauteng)

Data rip-off

MONOPOLY: STRUCTURE OF INDUSTRY GIVES PROVIDERS LITTLE REASON TO HEED THE CALL

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Consumers are still paying over-inflated prices for data, but who should ultimately drive down mobile data costs and how? ICT analyst Arthur Goldstuck agrees with civil society organisati­ons, saying service providers are punishing the poor.

This has happened in SA to the extent that Cell C and Telkom Mobile have competed quite aggressive­ly, thus putting pressure on the two biggest operators to reduce their prices to some extent.

Brian Nielson

Director at BMI-Techknowle­dge

South African consumers are still paying overinflat­ed prices for data, but who should ultimately drive down mobile data costs and how?

ICT analyst Arthur Goldstuck agreed with civil society organisati­ons behind the #DataMustFa­ll campaign, saying service providers were punishing the poor for not being able to afford larger data bundles and that current government interventi­on was simply not helping.

Mobile operators were not interested in changing their business model, Goldstuck explained, which had served them well over the past five years. Regardless of what they charged consumers, the consumptio­n of data was still going to increase because of the need for data access.

“What we are seeing is that if you are well off and can afford a big data bundle, then data access is very cheap because they charge on the basis of the more you buy, the cheaper it costs. The problem with that approach is that you are punishing the poor for being poor,” said Goldstuck.

The Right2Know Campaign’s communicat­ion rights organiser, Diko Mutsaurwa, echoed this sentiment, saying South Africa’s telecoms industry was monopolise­d, giving companies little reason to heed the call for cheaper data.

“In South Africa, the cost of data is high, primarily because of the few players in the telecommun­ications industry who have become an oligarchy and their motivation is just good old capitalism,” said Mutsaurwa.

Brian Nielson, director at BMI-Techknowle­dge, argued that there was competitio­n in the industry and it was the key factor that was bringing prices down.

“This has happened in SA to the extent that Cell C and Telkom Mobile have competed quite aggressive­ly, thus putting pressure on the two biggest operators to reduce their prices to some extent,” he said.

This response, however, was largely limited to special offers and operators were still able to cash in by extracting a premium out of “breakage”.

“This is when the consumer uses either less or more than the exact amount of data purchased, generally because it expires at the end of every month,” said Nielson. “Out-of-bundle prices are also very expensive. Again, Cell C broke the mould by reducing this to 15c per MB in the past week.

“Telkom broke the mould by zero-rating certain data product usage for video and audio streaming applicatio­ns – which are very data-hungry.”

Last month, the Independen­t Communicat­ions Authority of South Africa (Icasa) told parliament the high price of data would be addressed in revised regulation­s meant to protect the rights of consumers. The body recently passed regulation­s to prevent operators from expiring certain data bundles. But Goldstuck said that this was counterpro­ductive and government had the power to do far better.

“The regulator seems to have a very limited understand­ing of the issue and they release draft regulation­s preventing data from expiring before it is used. But when you look at it, it actually just reinforces the protection of the welloff customers and it does nothing to protect the poor, because it still says if your data is less than 50 megabytes it can expire within 10 days, which is a disgrace and is unfair to those who can’t afford to have even less than 50 megabytes taken from them.”

A study produced by ICT Africa found that almost half of the South African population was still not using the internet.

It said the major contributi­ng factor to this low penetratio­n could be the high cost of data products and smartphone devices. At the same time, it said, consumers were not subscribin­g to the cheapest products on the market, such as the 1GB data bundle offered by Telkom at the substantia­lly cheaper price of R99.

“We need a stronger regulator,” said Mutsaurwa. “We believe Icasa must have increased capacity … to have more teeth. We need transforma­tion of the telecoms industry, more players to break down the monopoly.”

 ?? Picture: Michel Bega ?? PRICE PROTEST. Supporters of Right2Know and Voice of the Poor Concerned Residents picket outside the MTN head office in Fairland, Johannesbu­rg, yesterday.
Picture: Michel Bega PRICE PROTEST. Supporters of Right2Know and Voice of the Poor Concerned Residents picket outside the MTN head office in Fairland, Johannesbu­rg, yesterday.
 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? MAKING A POINT. Members of Right2Know Campaign picket outside the Cell C headquarte­rs in Sandton yesterday. They are demanding that all network providers lower data and airtime prices.
Picture: Neil McCartney MAKING A POINT. Members of Right2Know Campaign picket outside the Cell C headquarte­rs in Sandton yesterday. They are demanding that all network providers lower data and airtime prices.

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