EU telecoms commissioner Viviane Reding has berated Europe's biggest telcos
for resisting the move to a
single
telecoms market across the EU.
Speaking at the
CEO
Summit of the European Telecommunications Networks' Operators Association
in Venice over the weekend, Reding spoke on Europe's evolving single telecoms
market, particularly in light of the current financial crisis.
Reding pointed out the massive market share still held by the various
national incumbents and the large national interest maintained by the local
governments in the companies.
"Of course, many of you will see these figures as demonstration of your
economic success. You will certainly understand that the Commission and national
regulators have to look at them also from the angle of effective competition,"
she said.
"These figures also show to us that 10 years after the opening of markets to
competition, the job of regulators is only half done. I know that you do not
like me saying this. But this is my role as European telecoms commissioner. It
is because of your economic and political power that the Commission has to
remain vigilant, as the independent guardian of competition in the European
Union," she said.
Speaking of the current financial crisis, Reding said that many operators had
approached her requesting that telecoms regulations be softened or scrapped. She
responded by saying that: "I firmly believe that regulation taking care of
competition always has a positive effect on the economy. Times of economic
difficulties are thus not a reason to suspend the principles of competition law.
"I am convinced that, for the time being, and if we want to continue the
evolutionary path of Europe’s model of telecoms regulation, we cannot do without
some regulation and some regulatory supervision in the telecoms markets," she
added.
Reding argued that a single market for telecoms incumbents offered massive
commercial opportunities, and that regulatory fragmentation and national
protectionism is not in the best interests of the telco companies or the
consumer.
"CEOs of many European telecoms incumbents often tell me that telecoms
markets would be 'mainly national', and this is a view widespread among many
telecoms ministers as well. This is, honestly, nonsense," she said.
"We are talking here about a sector where business is based to a large extent
on radio spectrum and the internet protocol – and thus on technical resources
that, by definition, do not know economic borders."
Reding pointed to recent research that suggested that regulatory
fragmentation and the lack of a single telecoms market costs European businesses
€20bn a year.
She left the summit audience with the choice: "Do you want to be friends or
foes of a single telecoms market in Europe? Do you really want to let, for
short-term reasons, the single market slip away to your US competitors? Or do
you want to show the way to a modern, competitive European telecoms sector which
will, once again, be the driving force for growth and jobs in the whole European
economy?"
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