Title: Afghanistan Roshan Progress
1Afghanistan Roshan Progress
Samir SatchuDirector Telecommunications
PolicyKabul National ICT Conference April 26,
2006
2Agenda Telecommunications Update
- GoA and Private Sector Progress since 2003
- Factors that have contributed to Growth since
2003 - Where do we go from here?
- Factors that may constrain Growth and Limit
Future Investment
3Afghanistan - January 2003
- 85K users
- 20K Fixed Lines
- 35K Thuraya
- 30K Mobile
- Entry barrier very high ( 400)
- Call charges high (up to 2/Min)
- Service available only in 4 cities
- Low Quality
- No Regulatory Framework
Only 3 out of every 1,000
Afghans were connected
4What has happened since January 2003?
- Introduction of Competition Roshan (2003),
Areeba (2005) - - 5 Mobile Operators by end 2006
- Roshan has invested approximately 200m since
January 2003 - - Private Sector has invested over 350m into
Afghanistan Telecommunications - Emerging Light Touch Regulatory Framework
- - Telecom Law has been passed
- - TRB has become ATRA
- Afghan Telecom has been Corporatised
- Corporatisation is the first step towards a
privatisation -
5Afghanistan Coverage - Today
A new Roshan BTS is put on air every 3 days
6Then (January 2003) Now (2006)
Today 50 out of every 1,000 Afghans are connected
7How do we compare internationally?
8And Jobs
Direct Indirect Impact on Employment
)))
Employees
Contractors
Suppliers
Dealers
Distributors
700
1500
5000
5500
2500
)))
Roshan directly/indirectly employs over 15,000
Afghans
9Factors Contributing to Growth
- Unrelenting Demand After 30 years of Fighting,
people want to Talk - Access to telephony is a necessity not a luxury
- Easier to do business, access information, talk
to your family - Vital in an environment with limited
infrastructure - Competition, Competition, Competition
- The Market is Driving down Prices 5 operators
by end 2006 - A competitive market place removes the need for
MoC to intervene e.g. on retail pricing - Ministry of Communications Private Sector
Partnership - Dialogue between GoA and Private Sector Tax
Settlement - MoC Policy - Not to operate but to create an
enabling environment for operators - Light Touch Regulation So Far..
- No intervention so far on tariffs, facilities
sharing, coverage - Principle that Regulator should only intervene if
operators are abusing their position or in market
failure situations e.g. TDF
10Where will we go from here?
- 5 Penetration 35-40 Population Coverage
Massive Unaddressed Market for 5 operators to
compete over - N.b. Operators must be able to fund continued
network expansion over the next 5 years - Ministry of Communications 10 Year Plan
- 10 Mobile Penetration - 2008
- 30 Mobile Penetration 2013
- Industry Forecasts
- 10 Mobile Penetration will be reached in 2007
- By 2010 Mobile Penetration will be between 17
23 (App. 4 million) - But 30 Mobile Penetration by 2011 would not
completely surprise us
11This will only happen IF
- Private Sector Constitutional Commitment (Article
10 Engine of Growth) is adhered to in the
broadest terms by the Government of Afghanistan - Nationalisation of International Gateway will
strangle all foreign direct investment into
Telecommunications and other sectors MoC
understands this - Tax Treatment of Telecommunications Sector is
Predictable and not Short Termist - Over-taxation will slow down investment
- Growth in Mobile Penetration has a positive
impact on GDP growth - Businesses need long-term predictability on
taxation - Nuisance Taxes stifle all commercial activity
- Regulatory Approach must be Less is More as
it has been so far - Price Controls, Forced Sharing stifle investment
- Market is addressing MoCs policy objectives
- Continued Development of Investor Friendly Legal
Environment - Private Investment Laws etc. are investor
friendly - Adequate Dispute Resolution
12RoshanNazdik Shodan