{"id":96345,"date":"2017-03-29T08:29:05","date_gmt":"2017-03-29T13:29:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.ict-pulse.com\/?p=96345"},"modified":"2017-04-07T16:23:33","modified_gmt":"2017-04-07T21:23:33","slug":"locally-owned-telecoms-tech-firms-protected-market","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ict-pulse.com\/2017\/03\/locally-owned-telecoms-tech-firms-protected-market\/","title":{"rendered":"Should locally-owned telecoms or tech firms be protected in the market?"},"content":{"rendered":"
A discussion of some of the pros and cons of governments trying to protect locally-owned telecoms or tech businesses in markets that also have foreign-owned firms.<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n Further, many Caribbean countries pride themselves on having telecoms environments that aim to support competition; and when competition is considered inadequate, having systems in place that permit regulatory intervention. However, this open and competitive environment can mean that smaller players, which frequently are locally-owned, and not as well resourced as the major regional carriers, struggle to survive.<\/span><\/p>\n This conundrum, was the source of concern for the Leader of the Opposition in the British Virgin Islands (BVI), Andrew Fahie, who was of the view that the Government and the local telecoms regulator, the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission (TRC), <\/span><\/p>\n …should formulate regulations and legislation to protect local companies, adding that a special incentive should be provided to the only telecom company that is fully owned by locals<\/i><\/span>\u201d:..<\/span><\/p>\n …As a government, we have to continue to massage our regulations \u2013 massage our laws so that we can help our companies to get to be able to compete. That\u2019s how this territory was built, in making sure that our people get a little hand up \u2013 not a hand out…<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n …I know that I am gonna get some lashing in the public as the Leader of the Opposition here battling for CCT. I am battling for my people, but not to give them an unfair advantage. But we have to find some incentive to help them. Flow could take up here now and go. Digicel could take up here now and go, but it\u2019s not so easy for CCT to take up and go.\u201d <\/span><\/i><\/p>\n
\nIn the Caribbean telecoms space, much of the focus tends to be on the major telecoms carriers, \u00a0Digicel and Flow. We are preoccupied with their every move, and their plans and strategies in \u00a0individual countries and the region as a whole. However, it also means that to a considerable degree, the other players get little or no attention – by us, consumers, but also policymakers and regulators.<\/span><\/p>\n