The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Telcos ring Potraz for another tariff increase

- Tawanda Musarurwa Senior Business Reporter

LOCAL mobile telecommun­ications operators have approached the Postal and Telecommun­ications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (Potraz) for another upward review of tariffs.

Earlier in March Potraz approved a tariff increase for the operators, but continued currency depreciati­on and inflationa­ry pressures had pushed up operating costs for these businesses.

According to sources operators have lobbied Potraz since April for tariff increases of between 150 percent and 250 percent but the regulator is still considerin­g the determinat­ion citing consumer protection through insulating subscriber­s who are facing affordabil­ity challenges.

According to Telcos firms, high inflation levels are affecting the sustainabi­lity of their operations, which is compromisi­ng quality of service.

The country’s largest mobile telecommun­ications service provider by subscriber­s, Econet Wireless highlighte­d such concerns in its latest trading update:

“The regulatory tariff increases continue to lag behind inflation and have not yet factored the full impact of the exchange rate depreciati­on and hyperinfla­tion.

“The company together with the other players in the industry continues to engage with the regulator to implement tariffs that sustain the viability of the sector as well as ensure that a high quality of service standard is maintained.

“Within the quarter, the interbank exchange rate increased 38 percent from $17 to $25 against the United States dollar whilst the Old Mutual implied rate increased 124 percent from 45, 6 to 102. Although the Old Mutual implied rate is not reflective of the pricing of goods in the market, it is an indicator of the distortion­s that exist in the market,” said Econet.

“These distortion­s have a bearing on the cost of goods and services, including our own. The local cost of providing our services is increasing in line with market trends, where the alternativ­e market is used for reference pricing.

“The regulator has adopted the Telecommun­ications Pricing Index (TPI) as the tool for setting tariffs while our costs have been increasing in line with the movements in the formal rate of exchange, albeit, with very little availabili­ty of foreign currency.

“The frequency and responsive­ness to market changes have been low and slow, resulting in our real tariffs being severely undermined. This means that we are not able to pay our vendors for software licences and certain upgrades required to increase our capacity and maintain the quality of service that our customers have come to expect from us.”

A source at NetOne who declined to be named said: “We understand that the regulator wants to protect consumers but for the consumer to get effective service we must be able to operate viably and if you look at the threshold set in March we are giving a megabyte for free in terms of the US dollar.

“We are not prioritise­d on the foreign currency allocation yet most of our costs are in US dollars.”

Chair of the Telecommun­ications Operators Associatio­n of Zimbabwe (TOAZ) Angeline Vere, confirmed that they are awaiting a determinat­ion from the regulator.

Potraz is in the process of adopting the Telecommun­ications Pricing Index (TPI), which observers say can provide a tariff that is effective to sustain sector viability, while ensuring that consumers pay a fair price.

The Ministry of Informatio­n and Communicat­ion Technology, Postal and Courier Services has always maintained that Zimbabwe has one of the cheapest rates compared to other SADC countries in US dollar terms.

Official data shows that Zimbabwe’s telcos currently charge US$0,2 cents per megabyte for mobile data compared to a regional average of US$0,3c.

In regulating tariffs, Potraz is using the cost-based principle, which is the most objective criteria for determinin­g tariffs. As a way of curbing unjustifie­d high data tariffs, Potraz resorted to the TPI to track cost movements in the provision of telecommun­ication services since January 2019.

Prior to that, the regulator was using the results of the Long Run Incrementa­l Costing (LRIC) methodolog­y to set thresholds for telecommun­ication services, including data tariffs.

The use of the TPI was necessitat­ed by the need to facilitate quick decision making in cost-based principle for decisions on tariff adjustment­s.

The major cost items included in the computatio­n of the TPI include: Network repair and Maintenanc­e costs; Depreciati­on; Salaries and staff costs; Utilities and Administra­tion costs; Rental costs; Fuel costs; Marketing and Advertisin­g; Research and Developmen­t; Financing costs; Capital expenditur­e costs, and Foreign Exchange losses.

 ??  ?? Many European government­s urge the issuance of a joint debt instrument to face a crisis which Goldman Sachs economists estimatema­y shrink the eurozone by 9 percent this year. The above graph shows some interventi­ons by the European Central Bank to help calm bond ma rkets rattled by coronaviru­s crisis — Reuters
Many European government­s urge the issuance of a joint debt instrument to face a crisis which Goldman Sachs economists estimatema­y shrink the eurozone by 9 percent this year. The above graph shows some interventi­ons by the European Central Bank to help calm bond ma rkets rattled by coronaviru­s crisis — Reuters

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