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Macro Environment and Telecommunications

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Title: Macro Environment and Telecommunications


1
Macro Environment and Telecommunications
  • Lecture slides

University of Fort Hare, South Africa
Compiled by Toks Oyedemi NetTel_at_Africa 2003
2
Module 1 Information and Information
Revolution
3
Essence of Information and Information Technology
  • information has become the defining feature of
    the modern world, mainly due to
  • The use of information in socio-political
  • and economic spheres
  • The rapid developments of information
  • technologies to create, analyse, store,
    communicate, and disseminate information.

4
Information Revolution
  • The explosion of information,
  • facilitated by the technological
  • revolution in computer applications
  • and telecommunication networks.
  • The increasing development in ICTs
  • has revolutionized various socio-political and
    economic sectors, such as manufacturing,
    business, science and technology, schools and
    homes.
  • The information revolution indicates the massive
    production of information

5
Critiques of Information revolution
  • Invention of Printing
  • critics argue that the current information
    revolution is the 'second information
    revolution'. The invention of the printing
    machine in 1444 sparked the first information
    revolution.

Read more about Gutenbergs invention
Gutenbergs printing invention
6
Critiques of Information revolution
  • Historical Perspective of the Information
    Revolution
  • Every society creates information to suit the
    needs of that particular epoch in human
    civilization. The history of civilization points
    to various levels and usages of information in
    everyday life.
  • The argument is that the 'explosion' in
    information today is apt for present day society

7
Impacts of Information Revolution
  • Technological advancement computers, fibre optic
    cables, satellite, mobile phones etc
  • Economic, business and finalcial implication
    E-commerce, employment boost in the info sector,
    infor as income generator
  • Education E-education
  • Management and Control Regulation and Policy in
    the info sector
  • The Nation State Virtual society, information
    society, national issues are discussed on global
    arena e.g ITU, WTO
  • Urban Migration Ideas and information
    move,making it less for people to move

8
The Information Society
  • cogent points that characterize the 'information
    society'
  • The importance of information and the creation of
    knowledge,
  • The prominence of the role of IT in the
    production
  • and dissemination of information,
  • The use of information networks for the
    distribution of information
  • The radical changes in people's lives as a result
    of increasing integration of information and
    communication technologies (ICTs) into all
    spheres of public and private lives and
  • The necessity for citizens to be trained in new
    skills to allow them benefit from the access to a
    massively expanding store of information
  • Nassimbeni (1998)

9
Defining Information Society
  • The society that is currently being put in place,
    where low cost information and data storage and
    transmission technologies are in general use. The
    generalisation of information and data use is
    being accompanied by organisational, commercial,
    social and legal innovations that will profoundly
    change life both in the world of work and in
    society generally (Nassimberi 1998 154
  • Webster (1997) provides five analytical criteria
    in defining the information society
  • technological economic occupational spatial
    and cultural
  • Go to the dynamic content on KEWL for different
    definitions

10
Meaning of ICT
  • ICTs refer to the various technologies that
    enhance the creation, storage, processing,
    communication and dissemination of information.
    ICTs also refer to the different infrastructures
    used in these processes, their applications and
    the numerous services these infrastructures
    render. We identify the following technologies as
    the elements of ICTs
  • Media of Communication (e.g radio, television)
  • Information machine (e.g Computers)
  • Telecommunications technologies and equipment
    (Satellites, fibre optic cables, phones,
    Facsimile machines)
  • Telecommunications infrastructures in particular
    have become the driving forces of ICTs they have
    the capability to link all various ICT elements
    together

11
Potential uses of ICTs
  • Facilitating public and
  • private sector activities in
  • areas such as in
  • Public administration ICTs facilitate the
    provision public information that is useful to
    the community at large. E.g e-Government
  • Urban and Rural Development ICT applications are
    useful in facilitating development programs in
    many countries. E.g The establishment of
    telecenters in rural communities can facilitate
    economic empowerment.
  • Transport.
  • In the transport sector, ICT applications
    can be used to improve road, air and rail
    transportation.

12
Potential uses of ICTs
  • 2. Improving the quality of life for citizens
    such as in
  • Health E.g Telemedicine
  • Special Needs (for the Physically Challenged)
    Braille keyboards and printers, SMS etc

13
Potential uses of ICTs
  • Education E.g Libraries have migrated from the
    traditional Dewey cataloguing system to a
    web-based cataloguing and search application.
    E-Learning
  • Agriculture There are expert system designed
    to handle agricultural issues such as water
    utilisation and management, pest control, harvest
    management and so forth.
  • Environment E. g GIS is an automated system
    that enables the capture, storage, checking,
    integration, manipulation, analysis, display, and
    modelling of complex spatial data

14
Potential uses of ICTs
  • 3. Sharing Knowledge and Improving Access to
    Information
  • E-mail, The web and other platform of
    information communication
  • Facilitating Activities in the Business Sector
    such as
  • Manufacturing ICTs applications are linking the
    process chains in manufacturing as opposed to
    improving or facilitating single steps in the
    production lines. For instance, the use of
    Computer-aided-design (CAD) has improved the
    design stages of machine tools.
  • Electronic Commerce

15
Potential uses of ICTs
  • Travel and Tourism
  • ICTs in this industry consist of various
    components that include computerised reservation
    systems, teleconferencing, video, video
    brochures, management information systems,
    airline electronic information systems,
    electronic funds transfer, digital telephone
    networks, smart cards, mobile communication,
    e-mail, and Internet.

Integrated Information Technologies for
Integrated Tourism and Local Economy Management.
Source Mansel When (1998
16
The Telecommunication Revolution
  • Telecommunications can be defined as the process
    of communicating information via electronic means
    over a distance.
  • The development in telecommunications is
    increasing at a spectacular rate
  • Today, innovations in satellite and wireless
    telephony, coupled with solid state components
    for digital switching and end user equipment,
    have spectacularly lowered the costs of providing
    telecommunications facilities to any location,
    from the buzzing city center to rural villages

17
Factors Responsible for the Growth of the
Telecommunications Sector
  • Technology
  • Competition

18
Factors Responsible for the Growth of the
Telecommunications Sector
  • Technology
  • Capacity New technologies such as optical
    fibre have
  • enormous capacity to carry information.
  • Digitization Telecommunication networks are
    becoming totally digital, so that any type of
    information, including voice and video, may be
    sent as a stream of bits in a compressed form
    and reconstructed for use at the receiving end.
  • Ubiquity Advances in wireless technology
    such as cellular radio, Personal Communications
    Services (PCS), and low earth orbiting (LEO)
    satellites will provide mobile and personal
    communications virtually anywhere.
  • Convergence The convergence of
    telecommunications, data processing, and imaging
    technologies has ushered the era of
    multimedia.

19
Factors Responsible for the Growth of the
Telecommunications Sector
  • Competition
  • There was a time when telecommunications seemed
    to be natural monopoly worldwide. Now, the trend
    is changing more and more national governments
    are liberalizing and introducing competition.
  • The liberalization of the telecom sector has
    brought competition to the telecom markets.

20
Telecommunication System
  • Users Devices
  • Transmission Systems
  • Wire and cable technology
  • Wireless technology

21
Wire and Cable Technology
  • Copper Wire
  • One of the oldest transmission
  • channels currently in use today
  • Basically used for voice transmission
  • Easy to install and cheap to acquire
  • Maintenance cost high and susceptible to
    corrosion, rain and theft.

In South Africa, in the year 2000, over 740
copper theft incidents were reported, due to
this, more than 44 000 Telkom's customers were
left without communication for days.
22
Wire and Cable Technology
  • Coaxial Cables
  • Consist of two wires The first, a copper wire,
    surrounded by an insulator, the second is
    surrounded by a metallic cylinder called the
    shield.
  • provides a higher capacity than the copper
    cables
  • Electrical interference is reduced
  • It has the potential to also carry television
    signals

23
Wire and Cable Technology
  • Fibre Optics
  • Fibre optic utilizes thin strands of glass fibre
    through which light waves travel
  • not susceptible to any electromagnetic
    interference common to most electrical systems.
  • it provides a higher transmission capacity it
    provides broad bandwidth
  • provides capacity to transmit all forms of
    communication (voice, data and video).

A fiber-optic connection is faster than wireless
by many orders of magnitude. A single optical
fiber can carry about 3 trillion bits per second
(bps). The fastest wireless service (fixed
wireless access) approaches 2 million bps. So,
fiber optics can be more than a million times
faster.
24
Wireless Technologies
  • Microwave
  • Microwave systems transmit voice and data through
    the atmosphere as super-high-frequency radio
    waves
  • One particular characteristic of the microwave
    system is that it cannot bend around corners
    therefore microwave antennas must be in "line of
    sight" of each other
  • The following are some of the characteristics of
    the microwave system
  • High Volume
  • Long distance transmission
  • Point to point transmission
  • High frequency radio signals are transmitted from
    one terrestrial transmitter to another
  • Satellites serve as a relay station for
    transmitting microwave signals over very long
    distances. See image next slide

25
Wireless Technologies
  • Low-Orbit Satellite and Microwave Transmission

Source Telecom Networks. http//myphliputil.pears
oncmg.com/student/bp_laudon_mis_7/ch08.ppt
26
Wireless Technologies
  • Satellite System
  • Satellites work by receiving and
  • transmitting radio signals from one earth
    station to another
  • Satellite system has the advantages of
    transmission from point to multipoint systems,
    which means transmissions can be beamed to areas
    that are geographically dispersed.
  • Has the potential to beam signals across
    different countries this has improved
    international telephony enormously
  • Has also improved television signal transmission
    as well

27
Telecommunications in Africa
  • The telecommunication sector is steadily growing
    in Africa
  • more than 36 countries have created a separate
    regulatory body for the telecom sector
  • fixed lines services have very low penetration in
    Africa
  • 2.78 main telephone lines per 100 inhabitants
  • Some Reasons for the low penetration are
  • Lack of investment,
  • Investment inefficiencies,
  • Inadequate private sector involvement,
  • foreign exchange scarcity,
  • poor management incentives and
  • Insufficient regional development

28
Telecommunications in Africa
  • Africa is witnessing a thriving cell phone market
  • The liberalization of the African Telecom market
    has brought increased growth in the cell phone
    market
  • Many African countries have introduced active
    competition in the cell phone market
  • MTN and Vodacom are two of the major cellular
    operators in Africa

29
Telecommunications in Africa
  • Telkom's (South Africa) installed telephones and
    lines account for about 40 percent of the total
    lines installed in Africa
  • Nigeria, with a population of over 120 million,
    has the potential for Africas largest telecom
    market. The Nigerian market has witnessed
    impressive development, especially in mobile
    telecom market.

                                               
                                                  
                                                  
           
Nigeria Telecoms Market Growth, 1991 - 2001
30
The Internet
  • The Internet is the largest computer network on
    the planet
  • The many uses of the Internet include
  • 1. Electronic Mail (e-mail)
  • 2. World Wide Web (WWW)
  • 3. The connection of remote computers
  • 4. Remote control of remote equipment
  • 5. Remote data acquisition

31
The Fundamental Concept of the Web
  • The Hypertext Concept works by means of
    hyperlink, usually in non-linear sequence
  • Web Browser displays a web document and enables
    users to access web documents
  • Web Server looks for the requested information,
    retrieves it and send it to the browser
  • Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) These are the
    web addresses.

32
Structure of web addresses
33
Internet Use in Africa
  • Considerable development has been made in terms
    of the expansion of the use of the Internet in
    Africa.
  • The African market grew by 126 percent in the
    year 2000
  • About 66 percent, of Internet users on the
    African continent are in South Africa
  • Read more http//www3.sn.apc.org/africa/afstat.h
    tm

34
  • End of Module 1

35
  • Module 2
  • Basic principles and scope of regulations 

36
Why Regulate ICTs?
37
Types of Regulators
  • .

38
The industry-specific regulator (Telecom
regulator)
  • Determine the size of the telecom market
    (providing licenses)
  • Foster healthy relations between the different
    service providers (Overseeing interconnection
    agreement)
  • Address consumer complaints and
  • solve them
  • Protect consumers against high prices,
  • poor quality of service, inadequate
  • infrastructure, limited services, unsafe
  • equipment

Crispin Hughes/Panos Pictures
39
The industry-specific regulator (Telecom
regulator)
  • Resolve disputes, regulate for fair competition
    (avoid the abuse of dominance in the market
    place)
  • Ensure efficient use of the frequency spectrum
  • Encourage investment, innovation and optimum
    growth of the sector
  • Administer the numbering plan so that there are
    sufficient numbers available.
  • Monitor compliance with national and
    international telecommunications equipment
    suppliers and service providers

40
Economy-wide competition regulator
  • Apply competition policy evenly across all
    sectors, particularly where it concerns mergers,
    horizontal and vertical integration
  • Resolve disputes via the courts when complainants
    present complaints to the competition
    authority/commission.

41
Attributes of a regulator
  • Regulator should not be providing services in the
    sector it regulates
  • Regulator must be independent
  • independent of other interest in the telecom
    sector
  • independent of political interest (e.g Govt.)
  • Regulator must conduct its activities in an open
    and transparent manner.

42
Two forms of Regulatory Structure in the ICT
Sector in Africa
  • Independent Regulator
  • Regulatory activity located within government
    line ministries.

43
Models of Regulation in the ICT Sector
  • Government owns and operates the network, while
    also assuming the roles of policy maker and
    regulator

Common in many developing countries prior to the
liberalization of the telecom sector
44
Models of Regulation in the ICT Sector
Networks are privately owned and operated, but
the government, through one entity, makes the
policy for and regulates the market.
45
Models of Regulation in the ICT Sector
Networks are privately owned, while the
government sets policy for the industry.
Regulation is given to an independent body that
either reports to the government or acts as an
independent commission
46
Models of Regulation in the ICT Sector
This is the model in which networks are privately
owned, with little specific industry regulation.
National competition laws regulate all sectors
and telecommunications disputes are settled by
the courts.
47
Regulatory ProcessesThe Licensing Process
  • Bidding Process
  • Preceded by an Invitation To Apply (ITA)
  • States criteria for assessment and selection of
    winner

Source Kim, Park, Ko and Lee (200222).
48
Regulatory ProcessesThe Licensing Process
  • Auction
  • Criteria are set and license offer to the
    highest bidders
  • 2 types
  • One round or simple auctions (open and closed)
  • Multiple-round auctions
  • Germany used auction to award UMTS spectrum in
    2000
  • U.K raised 32.58 billion from the UMTS
    spectrum auction in 2000
  • The Netherlands auctioned off five licenses for
    2.3 billion in 2000
  • Spain raised only raised 425 million from its
    sale of four UMTS licenses in 2000

The first Telecommunications Auction process in
Africa was in Nigeria in 2001
49
Regulatory ProcessesThe Licensing Process
  • Lotteries
  • Fast, inexpensive and transparent approach for
    selecting from substantially similar or equally
    qualified applicants.
  • Should generally be preceded by a formal
    qualification process to select lottery
    participants

50
Regulatory ProcessesThe Licensing Process
  • Comparative Evaluation process
  • (Beauty Contest)
  • An approach for choosing among multiple
    applications that are substantially equal.
  • Criteria for selection always published in
    advance, and

applicants strive to demonstrate how their
applications meet the criteria better than other
applications
51
International Role players and
Telecommunications /ICT Regulation
  • WTOs GATS provides schedules on trade in
    telecommunications services.
  • Included in GATS is the Annex on
    Telecommunications which deals with
  • Liberalization
  • Competition prevention of anti-competitive
    practices
  • Interconnection
  • universal service obligations
  • Making licensing criteria publicly available
  • Establishment of an independent regulator
  • Allocation of scarce resources

52
International Role players and
Telecommunications /ICT Regulation
The Policy domain of the ITU aims to promote, at
the international level, the adoption of a
broader approach to the issues of
telecommunications
The ITU-D provides resources on trends in the
global telecom sector. E.g The Annual Trends in
Telecommunication Reform Which is based on the
annual Telecommunication Regulatory Survey. These
are valuable resources for governments reforming
their telecommunications sectors.
53
  • What role can regional Organizations in Africa
    play in the telecommunications regulation and
    reform in the continent ?

TRASA, ATU, WATRA, COMESA
54
  • End of Module 2

55
  • Module 3
  • Global Trends in Telecommunications and ICT

56
  • Slide development in progress
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