Some
significant steps toward deregulation of the Thai telecommunications
industry were made in the second half of 2001 as the country continued
preparing for full liberalisation in 2006 under World Trade Organisation
commitments.
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Talks on converting concessions granted
to private operators by state agencies made slow progress
with the parties unable to agree on financial framework.
The failure to settle on a formula is clouding efforts to
privatise and list state telecommunications agencies. |
However,
much remains to be done. Significantly, almost no progress has
been made in choosing the new National Telecommunications Commission
(NTC), which was supposed to have been in place in October 2000.
The NTC
is envisioned as having considerable power, and political tussling
over the suitability of its proposed members has dogged the
selection process; allegations of vested interests abound. The
members will have six-year terms and will be very difficult
to remove, hence the difficulty in finding the right people.
The major
development in the second half of 2001 was the passage of the
Telecom Service Bill, and the government's admission that it
was flawed.
Local industry
operators were highly critical of Article 8, a Senate-inspired
provision that limits foreign shareholdings in local operators
at 25%. Most major telecoms concerns' foreign shareholdings
already exceed the limit, with the notable exception of cellular
market leader Advanced Info Service, founded by Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra.
Elsewhere,
progress was sluggish on a new framework for converting concessions
granted to private operators by state agencies. This in turn
has affected the authorities' desire for speedy privatisation
of the Telephone Organisation of Thailand and the Communications
Authority of Thailand. They are supposed to be listed on the
stock exchange between April and June of 2002.
United Communication
Industry Plc has led the opposition to the cap on foreign shareholding,
as 47% of its shares are held by non-Thais. Ucom chairman Boonchai
Bencharongkul has lobbied Mr Thaksin to amend Articles 8 and
58 to prevent confusion and unfair competition.
Article
58 prohibits operators from collecting advance payments from
consumers. This is seen as hurting mobile-phone companies, which
see pre-paid service as their fastest-growing market. As well,
fixed-line operators must stop collecting 3,000-baht deposits.
The two
private fixed-line firms, TelecomAsia and Thai Telephone and
Telecommunication, stopped collecting the deposits on Dec 17.
But they, along with the Telephone Organisation of Thailand,
now face the problem of how to refund the deposits placed by
millions of existing customers.
TOT president
Sutham Malila said the TOT could go bankrupt if it had to return
the deposits to four million subscribers all at once. It is
considering refunding the 3,000 baht by reducing customers'
bills by 100 baht a month for 30 months. It is also considering
offering the refund in the form of shares once it is privatised.
The foreign-investment
cap, meanwhile, was likely to be raised to 49% when Parliament
resumes sitting in February, according to Finance Minister Somkid
Jatusripitak.
In addition
to Ucom, Total Access Communications (TAC), CP Orange and Thai
Telephone and Telecommunication all argued that capping foreign
shareholding could starve the capital-intensive industry of
new funds for expansion.
However,
industry sources remained sceptical whether the proposed amendment
by the government could win approval from the Senate, because
it was the upper house that had proposed the cap in the first
place.
Meanwhile,
conversion of telecom concessions is two years behind schedule,
but moved a step closer to resolution when the Chulalongkorn
University Intellectual Property Institute came out with two
new guidelines.
The first
guideline requires payment of revenue shares by private operators
to the state and compensation only until the formation of the
NTC or until 2006.
The second
requires private operators either to buy back or lease the networks
in which they had invested in under their build-transfer-operate
concessions.
But major
operators said the new framework was unjust. They disagree with
paying revenue shares based on forecast revenues to 2006, arguing
they are willing only to pay until the NTC is formed.
Once the
regulator is in place, it is supposed to grant licences to replace
any concessions that are converted.
The operators
also question why they should have to buy or rent the networks
when they still had unpaid debts from building them.
State agencies
are sceptical for their own reasons _ they believe the operators
will assign unreasonably low values to the assets, and will
only take back equipment and networks with considerable service
life left in them.
TA president
Supachai Chearavanont said TA had invested several hundred billion
baht in network construction and therefore had the rights to
use it until the end of the concession term or until 2018. "We
want to compete on a level playing field."
Other operators
take the same line, insisting that if they have to pay a licence
fee, revenue share and rent, they could not compete with new
players, who would pay only licence fees.
The institute
was tasked by the Transport and Communications Ministry to work
out a new conversion framework to break an earlier deadlock
over the Thailand Development Research Institute's guidelines.
The TDRI
had recommended compensation by telecom operators based on forecast
revenue for their entire remaining concession periods, in exchange
for converting revenue-sharing concessions into joint co-operation
or equity holdings.
More hopeful
signs are emerging for the listing of the TOT and the CAT on
the stock market, however, following the heavy public response
to the initial public offerings of Internet Thailand and PTT
Plc.
With annual
profits of nine billion baht, a good governance award and 200
billion baht in assets, TOT shares would surely attract foreign
investors, the agency's executives have said.
But a local
analyst warned that the listing might not go smoothly unless
there was a resolution of the concession conversion problem.
"If conversion
could be achieved, it would certainly provide a clearer picture
of the whole telecom industry," the analyst said.
Initially
the TOT would offer a maximum 25% stake to foreign investors
to avoid breaching the limit in the Telecom Service Law as it
currently exists. There is also a possibility the TOT and the
CAT will merge after they are listed, consolidating all of their
communications operations except the CAT's money-losing post
office, which would remain a separate entity.