Title: An Index of Postal Sector Liberalization
1An Index of Postal Sector Liberalization
- Presented to the 11th Conference on Postal and
Delivery Economics - June 7, 2003
- Toledo, Spain
Isabelle Andress, David Coulson, Juan
Ianni, Jarret Jackson, and Peter
MacKechnie IBM Business Consulting Services,
and World Bank Group
2Agenda
- Overview of the Liberalization Index
- Liberalization Index Results
- Policy Implications
3Overview of the Liberalization Index
4Liberalization in the Developing World
- The Postal Sector provides a basic communications
infrastructure needed for economic and social
welfare in the developing world. - Reserved area for Posts was designed to generate
compensation for providing universal service. - Current model is constrained by a governments
resources, lacks a ubiquitous infrastructure, and
may not provide universal service or universal
access. - Significant attention has been paid to other
regulated, formerly legally protected monopolies
Water, Utilities, Energy. - Posts, particularly in the developing world, have
largely been ignored.
5Major Reforms are Necessary
- The Postal industry is currently in a phase of
fast and significant transformation, creating
enormous challenges for this traditional service
sector. - - Increasing competition - New customer
demands - - Technological change - Globalization
- Like in the telecommunications sector, major
legislative, regulatory and institutional reforms
have to create the platform for vitalizing the
sector and for increasing private sector
participation.
6The Liberalization Index
- The Liberalization Index is designed to help the
World Bank evaluate the role of legislative,
regulatory and institutional changes on the
liberalization of the postal markets. - During the first week of April, 2002, we sent
questionnaires to 45 postal operators in Eastern
and Western Europe, Africa, Asia, and Latin
America. The responses from 26 of these countries
were used in creating the Liberalization Index. - IBM Business Consulting Services was contracted
to create an index of liberalization based on
each countrys responses to the questionnaire. - The Liberalization Index is intended to provide
the policy division of the World Bank (CITPO)
with additional insight into the postal sector.
It is not intended as an investment assessment
tool.
726 Countries Profiled in the Liberalization Index
Sweden
Poland
Mongolia
Great Britain
Germany
Czech Republic
Hungary
Moldova
Romania
Guatemala
Vietnam
Mauritania
Honduras
Chad
Cambodia
Trinidad Tobago
El Salvador
Kenya
Thailand
Tanzania
Namibia
Malawi
Botswana
Lesotho
Chile
New Zealand
8The Five Factors of Liberalization
Market Concentration
Market-wide Privileges
Barriers to Entry
Liberalization Index
Market-wide Obligations
Market Regulation
To Entry
Barriers
9Methodology
- Using a hierarchical decision process, a group of
industry experts assigned various weights to each
of the factors by rank ordering the individual
indicators within each of the factors and then
each of the factors relative to one another.
10The Liberalization Index Guiding Principles
- Market concentration is based on country reported
data for letter post market share. - Incorporates only self-reported questionnaire
data from each postal operator. - Index creates a relative score, which is more
important than the numerical value assigned. - Snapshot of postal operators at the point in time
when data were collected.
11Liberalization Index Results
12The Liberalization Index
13The Liberalization Index Two Case Studies
14Results of the Liberalization Index
15Regional Analysis
- Latin America De facto most liberal
- Very low market concentration for universal
service provider - High legal/regulatory barriers not enforced
- Africa De facto liberal
- Low Market concentration for universal service
provider, numerous providers - High legal/regulatory barriers not enforced
- Western Europe De jure most liberal
- Lowering legal/regulatory barriers
- High market concentration
- Asia Not Liberal
- High barriers to entry
- Strictly regulated environment
- Eastern Europe Not Liberal
- High barriers to entry
- High market concentration
16Policy Implications
17Trends Toward Corporatization and Liberalization
- Corporatization of the Public Postal Operator has
begun to occur. - Corporations remain mostly state-owned.
- De jure limits of the monopoly have been reduced.
- Western European markets have specifically begun
to reduce legal and regulatory barriers. - De facto competition in developing countries
places greater pressure on historical operators. - Historical operators remain dominant in most
markets. - Latin American markets tend to have greater de
facto competition. - African markets tend to have a large number of
alternative providers.
18New Questions Raised and New Horizons Opened
- Similarities and differences between
industrialized and developing countries. - Market Dynamics (mail volumes, limited or no
direct marketing, characteristics of the demand,
purchase power, illiteracy) - Universal Service (supply) versus Universal
Access (demand) - Competition, Private Sector participation and
Quality of Service - Regulatory Approach (limited competition, limited
experience, limited resources) - Similarities and differences in the postal and
telecommunications sectors. - Sequencing of sector reform
- Universal service fund versus smart subsidies
19Improvements in Sector Monitoring and Performance
- Developing countries need to have a detailed
understanding of their postal sector. - Market dynamics are not understood.
- Sector policies are rarely defined.
- Universal Service/Universal Access should be
clearly defined in postal law, at least to allow
a fair evaluation of associated costs. - Information systems of historical operators
should be strengthened to allow improved internal
management (cost accounting) and quality of
service. - Regulators should aim at building a constructive
relationship with operators and consumers
(transparent markets, level playing field
competition). - Historical operators should improve their market
orientation, management capacities, and financial
sustainability.
20Next Steps
- Additional research on the effects of regulatory
reform on postal market dynamics. - Additional research on the impact of postal
reform on sector growth and economic development
at large. - An assessment of the privately supplied market
segments. - Greater understanding of the market dynamics in
the postal sector.
21An Index of Postal Sector Liberalization
- Presented to the 11th Conference on Postal and
Delivery Economics - June 7, 2003
- Toledo, Spain
Isabelle Andress, David Coulson, Juan
Ianni, Jarret Jackson, and Peter
MacKechnie IBM Business Consulting Services,
and World Bank Group