Title: VODACOM
1- VODACOMS ORAL REPRESENTATION
- ICASAS PROPOSED DRAFT REGULATIONS IN RESPECT OF
INTERCONNECTION GUIDELINES (GN59) - 22 MARCH 2006
2 - OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION
- Introduction
- Summary of key arguments
- Legal authority, timing and context
- Legal basis for IC regulation
- Economic arguments and procedural points
- Conclusions and Recommendations
3Introduction (1)
- Vodacom welcomes the opportunity to participate
in the public hearings. - Vodacom acknowledges that regulation is used in
certain circumstances to address bottlenecks or
areas of established competitive market failure - Vodacom highlights the importance of ensuring
measures and practices that promote competitive
market forces, which balance - the need for affordable and high quality services
for consumers, - and adequate returns for investors, in order to
sustain and grow the electronic communications
market both at the infrastructure and services
levels - Vodacom is willing to abide by rulings, findings
and regulations that fall within the ambit of
governing legislation, follow due process and are
founded on sound economic principles
4Introduction (2)
- As noted in previous submissions on
Interconnection and Facilities Leasing
guidelines, Vodacom has material objections to
the draft regulations, particularly to the extent
that they have incorporated the exact same text - The legality of the regulations are the subject
of a High Court application and Vodacom reserves
its rights to participate in the hearings without
prejudice
5Summary of key arguments (1)
- The draft regulations are unlawful as they fall
outside the authority of the current Act and even
if applied under the new EC Act will require a
new public process on the basis of a different
regulatory framework - The timing of the regulation process is
inappropriate, given the imminent promulgation of
the new EC Act - The regulations seek to unlawfully confer wide
discretionary powers to ICASA and impose generic
homogenous remedies with potentially dire
consequences of regulatory failure and increased
costs to consumers - The regulations are deemed unlawful under section
43 (3) insofar as they fail to meet the
requirements of section 45 of the Act - In the absence of section 45 provisions, the
regulations could still be subject to
constitutional challenge (under PAJA) - The discretionary and unsubstantiated
declarations by ICASA fundamentally undermine the
provisions of section 45 of the Act and the due
process that this should entail (definition of
relevant markets, competition assessment and
application of appropriate remedies)
6Summary of key arguments (2)
- The application of uniform regulatory remedies to
all interconnection markets fundamentally
undermines the competition law principle of
applying the most appropriate, proportionate and
least intrusive regulatory remedy to address
specific competitive market failure - In making the Major Operator distinction, the
regulations are ultra vires in that they seek to
categorise licensees and impose discriminatory
regulations accordingly, without the requisite
legal authority - The definition of Major Operator in the draft
regulations is too vague to have any determinable
content, and will therefore be invalid - The draft regulations have limited applicability
to voluntary interconnection agreements (non-PSTS
licensees), and ICASAs authority to intervene is
subject to certain restrictions not honoured - Over and above the legal challenge, there are
compelling economic arguments to be made for a
cautious, appropriate and proportionate
regulatory approach
7 - LEGAL AUTHORITY, TIMING, AND CONTEXT
8Legal Authority
- The current Telecommunications Act is the only
legal basis for interpretation of the draft
regulations - The draft regulations fall outside the authority
of the current Telecommunications Act, and raise
further legal issues in respect of Competition
Law, Common Law, and Administrative Law - Interpretation under the yet to be promulgated EC
Act is unlawful - A new public process and draft set of regulations
will be required under the new EC Act - Many of the issues raised will survive the
promulgation of the EC Act
The draft regulations fall outside the authority
of the current governing legislation. If applied
under the new EC Act this will require a new
public process on the basis of a different
regulatory framework
9Timing
- Draft regulations were published over a year ago
- A new regulatory framework is about to be
introduced with the new EC Act - Regulatory forbearance is required in light of
the changing market structure and competitive
market dynamics. - The current licensing framework and market
structure are not necessarily reflective of the
different (developing) interconnect services
markets and are therefore not the most
appropriate basis for regulation, which needs to
be forward looking in the long term interest of
consumers - High risk of inappropriate regulation exists with
draft regulations, which may result in market
distortions and unintended consequences
Given anticipated changes to the regulatory
framework under the new EC Act, the approval of
regulations under the current Act is short-term
focused, resulting in unnecessary risk and
inefficiency.
10Context
- Interconnection represents one of many access
types - Different types of wholesale access are subject
to different levels of competition and thus
require different regulatory treatment. - Differentiation in the manner, form and extent of
regulation is important and a one size fits all
regulatory approach will not only fail to address
perceived problems but will introduce market
distortions and additional complexities in the
future. - Regulatory remedies must always be proportionate
to a specific competition problem (as supported
in section 2 of the Act).
The broad and generic regulations seek to
unlawfully confer wide discretionary powers to
ICASA and impose homogenous remedies rather than
analytically address problems in specific markets
- with potentially dire consequences of
regulatory failure and increased costs to
consumers
11 - LEGAL BASIS FOR THE REGULATION OF INTERCONNECTION
12Legal Basis for IC Regulation Section 43 of the
Act
- ICASA purports to make the Interconnection
regulations in terms of Section 43 of the
Telecommunications Act. - ICASAs authority in Section 43 of the Act is
limited to - Approval of lodged interconnection agreements,
- Resolution of interconnection negotiation
deadlock on request of negotiating party. - Prescribing guidelines relating to the form and
content of interconnection agreements, including
fees and charges payable - ICASAs authority is limited to the form and
content of interconnection agreements. In terms
of 43(3)(c) read with 43(4)(b) and (5)(b), ICASA
is authorised to create general guidelines and,
as a matter of discretion, impose the charges
determined only in such cases as when parties
have been unable or unwilling to agree on charges.
The Act does not confer the wide discretionary
powers assumed by ICASA in respect of
interconnection regulation.
13Legal Basis for IC Regulation Section 43 of the
Act
- Section 43(3)(c) of the Act (i.e.guidelines to
determine fees and charges) cannot be applied in
isolation and should be read subject to the
provisions of section 45 (manner of determining
fees and charges and fields of no or
insufficient competition) - In terms of Section 43 read with Section 45 ICASA
is not authorized to fix specific interconnection
charges - The jurisdictional precondition of insufficient
competition is one of objective fact and does
not lie in the subjective or arbitrary discretion
of ICASA. - ICASA fails to provide evidence of compliance
with section 45 in terms of making a
determination of insufficient competition in each
of the interconnection services markets before
prescribing a manner of determining fees/charges.
As the jurisdictional prerequisite in s 45 is not
satisfied, the regulations are deemed unlawful
14Legal Basis for IC Regulation Section 43 of the
Act
- If section 43 (3) were not concerned with
competition matters covered in section 45, then
this creates additional difficulties in the
regulations insofar as they deal with competition
matters relating to market definitions, major
operator, essential services etc. - Even if the requirement in section 45 (2) is not
a jurisdictional prerequisite to rulemaking in
terms of section 43 (3), there is further ground
for constitutional objection, in terms of the
grounds for judicial review of administrative
action under PAJA, as well as Common Law and
administrative law.
In the absence of section 45 provisions, the
regulations could still be subject to
constitutional challenge (under PAJA)
15Legal Basis for IC Regulation Constitutionality
- Both sections 43(3) and 45(2) of the Act present
fundamental constitutional problems in that they
do not provide ICASA with adequate guidance
regarding the exercise of its power to make
regulations in respect of interconnection fees
and charges - While the courts recognise the important role of
discretion in administrative action, it is
necessary for the Legislature to provide
sufficient guidance regarding its exercise - The Act, and in particular section 43, contains
no guidelines whereby the Authority may exercise
powers to determine, in its guidelines, inter
alia the fees and charges payable for
interconnection services. - For this reason it is doubtful that section 43(3)
of the Act will withstand constitutional
challenge, and if it does, it is even more
unlikely that the vague terms of the draft
regulations will survive constitutional
challenge.
It is unlikely that the draft regulations will
stand up to constitutional challenge.
16Legal Basis for IC Regulation Interconnection
definition
- Interconnection is a collective term which
encompasses a number of underlying services,
including origination, transit and termination - These services differ in nature, scope, level of
competition and even existence in different
markets - The broad definition of interconnection in the
Act, and the bundling of fundamentally different
access services in different markets in the
regulations do not acknowledge the material
differences in assessing levels of competition
and imposing proportionate remedies - The draft regulations simply declare all
interconnection services in the 6 identified
Telecommunications Markets to be Essential
Services thereby implicitly declaring
competitive market failure in all 18
interconnection services markets
The discretionary declaration of all
interconnection services as essential
fundamentally undermines the provisions of
section 45 and the due process that this should
entail.
17Legal Basis for IC Regulation Regulatory
Remedies
- A one size fits all, and therefore
disproportionate, regulatory approach is adopted
in the draft regulations - The regulations determine that the remedies that
would be imposed on any interconnection service
provided by any interconnection provider include - mandatory access to interconnection,
- transparency in interconnection charges and
agreements, - non-discrimination,
- retail price cap (non-Major Operators)
- cost based regulated charge control (Major
Operators). - No thorough market analysis has been conducted,
or the results of such analysis have not been
shared with interested and affected stakeholders
The uniform application of regulatory remedies
fundamentally undermines the competition law
principle of applying the most appropriate,
proportionate and least intrusive regulatory
remedy to address competitive market failure
18Legal Basis for IC Regulation Major Operator
distinction
- The regulations and not the Act introduce the
definition of Major Operator and prescribe
applicable interconnection charges. - There is no power in section 43 (3) or any other
provision in the Act which permits ICASA to
divide licensees into categories of Major
Operators and others and then impose
discriminatory restrictions on the different
categories - Section 96(2) of the Act, provides that
Different regulations may be made in respect
of different categories of telecommunication
services, equipment and facilities and periods - It does not provide that different regulations
may be made in respect of different licensees or
operators providing the same category of
telecommunications services.
The draft regulations are ultra vires in that
they seek to categorise licensees and impose
different and discriminatory regulations on
different licensees, without the legal authority
of the governing legislation to do so.
19Legal Basis for IC Regulation Major Operator
distinction
- Under the definitions in the draft regulations,
it is not clear whether the 3 Major Operator
criteria (a), (b) and (c) in the regulations are
cumulative or discrete requirements, nor is it
straightforward to apply (a) and (b) to the
factual circumstances of the operator - Clause 2.6 of the draft regulations allows for a
process that could result in declaration of a
major operator without applying any of the
criteria in the required definition. This
therefore falls short of the regime sought to be
created by the regulations themselves - Major Operators are defined in terms of the 6
identified Telecommunications Markets, while the
remedies applied are based on 3 interconnection
service types, spanning 18 markets in which the
particular operator may not in fact be dominant
or wield market power. - Without a thorough and coherent market analysis
to identify and define the relevant market(s)
where potential or existing market failure
exists, the imposition of remedies on Major
Operators will be ultra vires the Act
The definition of Major Operator in the draft
regulations is too vague to have any determinable
content, and will, if put in a final regulation,
be invalid
20Unlawful extension of scope of regulation and
powers
- ICASA assumes additional power to identify
interconnection services and to issue decisions,
determinations or additional guidelines without
the requisite authority in the Act (clause 21.7) - ICASA mandates that interconnection agreements
must provide for the retrospective application of
its determinations to existing agreements (Clause
21.5) without requisite authority of the Act and
despite limitation on ICASAs authority to
intervene in interconnection agreements - ICASA mandates transitional obligations in
respect of interconnection agreements (clause 12)
which is also ultra vires for the same reasons
outlined above
ICASA has extended its powers beyond that
authorized in the Act on a number of aspects of
the draft regulations
21Application of Regulations
- In terms of section 43(1) of the Act, the only
statutory obligation to conclude interconnection
agreements is applicable to PSTS licensees - ICASAs power is limited in providing guidelines
applicable to (voluntary) interconnection
agreements concluded by non-PSTS licensees, in
that the applicability of the guidelines is
restricted to interconnection providers, which
exclude non-PSTS players - ICASA is only authorized to impose terms and
conditions including charges and fees on parties
to interconnection agreements - In circumstances of deadlocks where intervention
is required and contemplated in the Act - For compulsory interconnection agreements (i.e.
where it is not open to parties to refuse to
agree on reasonable terms)
The draft regulations have limited applicability
to voluntary interconnection agreements (non-PSTS
licensees), and ICASAs authority to intervene is
therefore subject to certain restrictions not
honoured in the draft regulations.
22 - ECONOMIC ARGUMENTS AND PROCEDURAL ASPECTS
23Economic arguments (1)
- Regulation should focus on the regulation of
markets and not individual competitors - Regulators should focus on proportionate
regulation based on proven competitive market
failure rather than the delivery of anticipated
or desired future outputs in the absence of
appropriate competition analysis - Regulators should be wary of imposing access
obligations at the same time as licensing
additional entrants - Regulators should seek to encourage both
infrastructure and services entry to ensure
sustainable competition and that players do not
merely exploit the free option of riding on
others infrastructure, without assuming a fair
proportion of the risk
24Economic arguments (2)
- Regulation should attempt to mimic functioning
competitive markets, as competition is widely
accepted as the best means of maximising total
welfare by - ensuring investment and operational efficiency,
- fostering product and service innovation, and
- meeting customer needs
Over and above the legal challenge, there are
compelling economic arguments to be made for a
cautious, appropriate and proportionate
regulatory approach.
25Market Analysis Approach Rigorous and
transparent
1
2
3
4
5
Source ITU
A rigorous and transparent regulatory process to
conduct the market and competition assessment and
to determine appropriate regulatory remedies
would facilitate compliance with the provisions
of the Act, and ensure that only areas of
competitive failure are addressed.
26Conclusions and Recommendations
- The draft regulations are invalid. It is
recommended that the Authority should - Withdraw the draft regulations because if
published in its present form it will be invalid
under the Telecommunications Act and will also be
invalid under the yet to be published EC Act - Wait for promulgation of the Electronic
Communications Act - Commission a market study in terms of the
provisions of the new Act with a view to
identifying markets, which exhibit market
failure. - Practice regulatory forbearance given significant
uncertainty associated with the development of
the communications market under convergence with
the new regulatory framework introduced with the
anticipated EC Act
27 THANK YOU!