Chapter 4 Regulation of international mobile roaming
4.1
In the previous chapter the Committee concluded that the international
mobile roaming market in Australia is not functioning effectively because the
relatively small domestic population prevents Australian providers from
negotiating a competitive wholesale price with providers overseas. This chapter
considers the regulatory options available to deal with this problem.
4.2
As discussed in the previous chapter, the end user price for roaming has
a wholesale and retail component. The wholesale component is a result of
negotiations between providers in Australia and in other countries. The retail
component is the mark up applied by the Australian operator.
4.3
The Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy
(DBCDE) argued that there are two possible regulatory options available:
n regulate retail
prices (called retail price control); or
n regulate wholesale
prices.[1]
4.4
This chapter will considers these options and whether the price
information provided to travellers is adequate for them to be aware of the
costs involved in roaming.
Retail price control
4.5
Retail price control involves placing a cap on the retail cost of
calls. In other words, consumers cannot be charged more than the cap for a
call.
4.6
Retail price control would involve the Australian Government legislating
to implement price caps. Retail price controls for mobile telephony have been
used in the past. Specifically, domestic mobile to mobile price control
arrangements existed between July 1992 and June 2002. Roamed calls were not
included in this price control. [2]
4.7
Retail price controls have, on the face of it, a big advantage for
consumers. In a market where the price of a service is high, retail price
controls can be used to reduce the price of the service by capping its price.
In the telephony market, retail price controls have been used principally to
ameliorate the effect of having a single provider with close to a monopoly in
the market.[3]
4.8
However, the nature of the roaming market means that retail price
control is not necessarily the best regulatory tool to employ. While retail
prices for roaming are high, this is not due to one provider holding a monopoly
in the market, rather it is due to the fact that the wholesale cost of the
product may make up to 75 percent of the end user charge.
4.9
The wholesale cost is negotiated between Australian providers and
overseas providers. As the Australian Government can only impose retail price
controls on Australian providers, overseas providers would not be subject to
the price control. Australian providers will be forced to negotiate for a
charge that allowed them to price roaming services below the cap. If the
overseas provider they are negotiating with is not prepared to meet that price,
then no roaming agreement will be reached, and roaming will not be available
from that provider.[4]
4.10
In the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission’s (ACCC’s) 2005 Mobile
services review: International inter-carrier roaming, it reached the
conclusion that retail price controls are not the appropriate regulatory
response to consumer concerns about the high price of roaming services.[5]
The Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association (AMTA) agreed with this
assessment, arguing that retail price controls ‘would come at a huge cost to
Australian mobile network providers.’[6]
4.11
In AMTA’s view, any price controls imposed on Australian providers to
reduce the end user price of roaming would unfairly penalise Australian
providers for an issue outside their control.[7]
4.12
The Committee believes that the ACCC’s and AMTA’s arguments against
retail price controls on roaming are sound. Retail price controls would reduce
the end user price, but would not deal with the underlying market distortion in
the wholesale cost. Australian providers would be left with the double burden
of coping with the underlying distortion while carrying the cost of retail
price controls. In the long run, it might even mean Australians are not
offered the option of roaming in some countries at all.
4.13
However, the Committee notes that an alternative to retail price control
may be to regulate the percentage of the retail mark up charged within an
agreed wholesale pricing framework.
International regulation of costs
4.14
The alternative to retail price control is regulation of wholesale
costs. Regulation of wholesale costs has the advantage of targeting the
distortion that is causing high roaming costs, but, because wholesale costs
involve an international negotiations, regulating these costs is much more
complicated.
4.15
The Committee considers the following regulatory mechanisms for dealing
with the wholesale cost of roaming:
n declaring
international roaming under Part XIC of the Trade Practices Act 1974;
n regulation similar to
the European Commission (EC) Roaming Regulation; and
n regulation through
international cooperation.
Declaring international roaming
4.16
The ACCC noted in its 2005 Review that participants in that inquiry had
suggested the ACCC use its powers under Part XIC of the Trade Practices Act
1974 to declare wholesale roaming charges.[8] To ‘declare’ a product or
service means to create a legislative instrument that permits the ACCC to
regulate that product or service.
4.17
In assessing whether to declare the wholesale roaming charge, the ACCC
must be satisfied declaration will promote the long-term interests of end users
of the service. The ACCC indicated that to do so, it must first be satisfied
that it has the jurisdiction to regulate roaming charges set by providers in
overseas jurisdictions.[9]
4.18
The ACCC believes it is unlikely that it has jurisdiction over the
setting of wholesale prices by overseas providers, or over telecommunications
services established outside Australia. The Committee also believes it is
unlikely that the ACCC has these powers. Further, the ACCC is concerned that,
even if it did have jurisdiction over the wholesale cost setting behaviour of
overseas mobile network providers, it would be impractical to regulate the
wholesale costs set by the large number of overseas mobile network providers on
whose networks Australian consumers could potentially roam while travelling
overseas.[10]
The EU example
4.19
Roaming has been under review by the European Commission (EC) since
2005. In 2007, the EC introduced a Roaming Regulation, with the view to
reducing voice roaming costs across the EU (European Union). The Roaming
Regulation includes the following:
n a Eurotariff, which
was a tariff providers in the EU were required to offer their customers who
wished to roam within the EU;
n a cap on wholesale
charges between EU providers for roaming until 2010; and
n a requirement that
customers be sent an SMS when they crossed a border to inform them of the
mobile roaming rate they were going to be charged.[11]
4.20
The EC Roaming Regulation was reviewed by the European Regulators’ Group
(ERG) in 2008 with the intention of assessing the effectiveness of the
regulation and whether SMS and data roaming should be included in the
regulatory regime. he ERG found that:
n the price of voice
roaming had fallen significantly to the level of the Eurotariff or just below,
and had remained there;
n the price of SMS
roaming had not decreased for some time and was high compared to the actual
cost of sending an SMS on a roamed phone; and
n the price of
downloading data while roaming had steadily decreased.[12]
4.21
The ERG review recommended that the EC Roaming Regulation be extended
beyond 2010, and that SMS roaming be included. In relation to data roaming,
the ERG considered that monitoring costs would be sufficient at this stage.[13]
4.22
The Australian Telecommunications Users’ Group (ATUG) expressed support
for international regulation through development of a single market mechanism
similar to the EU regulations. ATUG recommends using mechanisms such as free
trade agreements to negotiate EU type regulatory arrangements.[14]
4.23
Alternatively, AMTA argued that the introduction of price regulation in
the EU is no reason to consider similar price regulation in Australia. According to AMTA, Australian and European conditions, such as the size of the
market, the structure of the market, and the fact that the EU encompasses a
number of countries, makes the situation very different.[15]
4.24
Outside of the EU, regulation of roaming costs is virtually
non-existent. This is primarily because the advantages to roaming regulation
offered by the structural arrangement of the EU are not replicated elsewhere.
The close proximity, both geographically and in regulatory terms, makes
negotiating and implementing roaming regulation much easier in the EU. Other
regions (including the Asia Pacific) do not exhibit the strong economic ties
and commonality of cultural and political institutions that characterise the
EU.[16]
International cooperation
4.25
The DBCDE described three approaches to international cooperation to
regulate wholesale costs:
n bilateral discussions
between countries;
n multilateral
discussions at forums such as the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation group of
nations (APEC) and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD);
and
n negotiations at
international rule making bodies, such as the International Telecommunications
Union (ITU).[17]
4.26
Bilateral discussions can cover mutually beneficial arrangements between
like minded countries. The ACCC considered that the most productive bilateral
partners for Australia would be with telecommunications regulatory
counterparts, in particular, the New Zealand Commerce Commission, Ofcom (UK),
and the Federal Communications Commission (USA).[18]
In addition, the DBCDE suggested discussions with the EU.[19]
4.27
In fact, the ACCC is already in discussion with the New Zealand Commerce
Commission, primarily with a view to determining which regulatory arrangements,
if any, might assist improving international mobile roaming outcomes for
Australian and New Zealand residents.[20]
4.28
A key issue in relation to bilateral regulatory cooperation is that the
nations Australia enters into bilateral arrangements with must, to have any
beneficial effect, be nations which Australians visit in some numbers. The
ACCC advised that the top four destinations for Australians in 2007 were:
n Asia (47 percent of
Australians travelling);
n Europe, including the
UK (25 percent);
n New Zealand (19
percent); and
n North America (12
percent).[21]
4.29
As is clear from these statistics, New Zealand is the largest single
nation destination.
4.30
International collaboration can be developed to provide better
information on costs and charges, and to share best practices in forums such as
APEC, the OECD, the ERG, and International Competition Network (ICN).[22]
Although the outcome of this work is usually non binding, it can be influential
in encouraging action towards a common purpose and establish baselines for good
regulatory practice.[23]
4.31
Each of the bodies above has functions in relation to competition policy
or regulation involving telecommunications. The ACCC advised that it will
explore ways to co-ordinate a regulatory response with these bodies in order to
find feasible measures to address the issue of high wholesale costs.[24]
4.32
In particular, the ACCC considers that dialogue and collaboration with
overseas regulators in relation wholesale roaming services may assist in
identifying a range of regulatory and enforcement actions that will promote
wholesale price competition in the supply of these services.[25]
4.33
International rule making can be explored through the ITU. The ITU is
the global forum where international telecommunications accounting methods are
discussed. However, exploring international rulemaking through the ITU takes a
great deal of time, as the agreement of many nations is required.[26]
4.34
The DBCDE advised that the Minister for Broadband, Communications and
the Digital Economy has already initiated discussions within APEC and
bilaterally with the EU and others to explore options. This work is being
followed up by the DBCDE.[27]
4.35
The Committee believes that the only effective regulatory response to
roaming prices is to establish an agreed regulatory framework for setting the
wholesale cost. It is clear from the discussion above that this is likely to be
a difficult and long term solution. Nevertheless, the other possible solutions
do not address the underlying distortion in the roaming market.
4.36
Both bilateral and multilateral possibilities are being, and should
continue to be, explored. In both cases, the Australian Government should
continue to make countries with large numbers of Australian travellers, such as
New Zealand, the priority.
4.37
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government pursue a policy
of regulating the wholesale cost of roaming through bilateral and multilateral
negotiations with other countries.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government
pursue a policy of regulating the framework for the wholesale cost of roaming
through bilateral and multilateral negotiations with other countries,
ensuring that countries with the largest number of Australian visitors are
given priority.
|
Choosing the best value service
4.38
In the absence of an immediate regulatory solution to the cost of
roaming, the Committee now discusses what can be done in the short term to
assist consumers deal with high roaming prices. Three issues are considered
here:
n price monitoring by
the ACCC;
n standardisation of
published pricing information; and
n provision of advice
on large bills.
Price monitoring
4.39
Periodic monitoring of prices by the ACCC might improve consumer
awareness and assist in formulating any future regulatory response.[28]
4.40
The ACCC is required, under Division 12 of Part XIB of the Trade
Practices Act 1974, to report each financial year to the Minister for
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy on prices paid by Australian
consumers for telecommunications services. Providers are required to provide
the relevant information to the ACCC. Roaming is not currently covered in this
report.[29]
4.41
When the ACCC considered whether to include roaming in this report in
2005, it found that the monitoring and publication of changes in average prices
paid by Australian consumers for international roaming services could help in
improving consumer awareness and information, and may assist regulators in
considering any further regulatory responses if international roaming prices do
not decrease over time.[30]
4.42
In September 2008, the ACCC released a discussion paper that included
proposals to introduce reporting requirements for international mobile roaming
services, in particular, cost, revenue and service usage information.[31]
4.43
Providers have responded to the ACCC’s discussion paper. All have
opposed the proposals, with some advising that the cost of collecting the
information would result in an administrative burden.[32]
4.44
AMTA acknowledges that information about providers’ roaming costs and
revenues might be useful for regulatory reasons, but notes that this
information is sensitive, and may not be able to be used without disclosing
sensitive commercial information about a provider.[33]
4.45
Given that AMTA concedes that this information may be useful for
regulatory reasons, the Committee supports the ACCC obtaining this information
from providers. While providers may object to providing this information, the
Committee believes it will be in their best interests in the long run. At the
very least, it will enable the Australian Government to confirm that Australian
providers are not responsible for high roaming costs, and it may even prove a
useful tool in international negotiations over regulation of wholesale costs.
4.46
The Committee encourages Australian carriers to agree to provide the
relevant information to the ACCC. In support of the ACCC’s actions, the
Committee recommends that the ACCC introduce mandatory reporting requirements
for international mobile roaming services, in particular, cost, revenue and
service usage information.
Recommendation 2 |
|
The Committee recommends that the ACCC introduce reporting
requirements for international mobile roaming services on Australian
providers. In particular, the Committee recommends that cost, revenue and
service usage information should be provided.
|
Standardisation of information on costs
4.47
The DBCDE considered that one of the following options might assist
consumers in selecting a roaming service:
n establishing
mechanisms for pricing to be easily understood by consumers through
standardised reporting mechanisms; and
n encouraging or
mandating industry codes on such matters as informing consumers about excessive
bills.[34]
4.48
The ACCC, in its 2005 review, examined three of ways of standardising
cost information:
n Enforcement action
under section 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (which prohibits
misleading or deceptive conduct) or other similar provisions in Part V of the Trade
Practices Act 1974. The ACCC indicated that it had received a number of
complaints alleging that a mobile network operator’s conduct breached section
52 of the Act. However, the ACCC could not reach a view because of the
disclaimers commonly provided by mobile providers in relation to, for example,
fluctuations in exchange rates.[35] The ACCC also believes
that section 52 of the Act was not a specific regulatory tool to address, in a
pre-emptive manner, broad-based concerns about the provision of consumer
information on roaming services. [36]
n Provision of consumer
information under section 28 of the Trade Practices Act 1974. Section 28
of the Act provides that the ACCC can develop consumer information campaigns
and price information accreditation systems as possible measures for improving
consumer information about services. [37] In relation to the
provision of consumer information, the ACCC pointed out that the Australian
Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has specific responsibility for public
information and education about telecommunications matters under section 6 of
the Australian Communications Authority Act 1997 and had published a
consumer fact sheet on roaming. ACMA’s fact sheet provides consumers with basic
information about what roaming is, when roaming is available, how roaming
services can be activated, the types of roaming services that may be available,
and the prices associated with roaming services.[38]
n Development of an
industry code setting out the information to be provided to consumers about
international roaming services.[39] Industry codes of
practice are encouraged in Australia through industry self regulation. Under
Part 6 of the Telecommunications Act 1997, telecommunications industry
bodies (such as the Communications Alliance, a body of industry and consumer
representatives) can develop and register industry codes to be registered by
ACMA.[40]
4.49
A key point when considering the standardisation of information is the
quality of information already available to the public. In 2005, the ACCC
judged that information provided by Australian providers was consistent with
the requirements in the European International Roaming Code.[41]
On this basis, the ACCC did not consider that the development of an industry
code dealing with the information provided to consumers on roaming services
would significantly improve the information currently available.[42]
4.50
AMTA argued that all Australian providers include the following
information about roaming on their websites already:
n countries where the
service is available;
n indicative prices in
Australian dollars for each service and the components of the service;
n how to activate
international roaming; and
n subscriber
eligibility for international roaming.[43]
4.51
Where an Australian operator has a roaming agreement with more than one
operator in a country, the operator also provides cost information for each
overseas provider so that the traveller can select a provider of their choice
in the country they are visiting.[44] In addition there are
ancillary sources of information available to travellers, such as the fact
sheets provided by ACMA and AMTA.[45]
4.52
The Committee considers that prescriptive requirements for publishing
pricing information are not warranted at the moment in the roaming market
because information on roaming is reasonably widely available However, the
Committee believes it is worth establishing a minimum standard for information
on roaming provided to travellers. The minimum should include:
n countries where the
service is available;
n the choice of
providers in each country;
n indicative prices in
Australian dollars for each service and the components of the service;
n how to activate
international roaming and any charges this will incur; and
n basic information on
how the pricing of international roaming differs from the pricing of local
calls, including:
§
the fact that the traveller pays an international charge to
receive calls;
§
the fact that the traveller pays an international charge when a
caller leaves them a voicemail message; and
§
the fact that exchange rate fluctuations means the exact cost of
a roamed call cannot be determined in advance.
4.53
This minimum standard of information should be available from providers’
websites, in hard copy on request by a customer, from shop fronts where
customers subscribe to roaming services, and verbally on request by a customer.
4.54
The Committee cannot make a recommendation binding on the private
sector, but the Committee suggests that AMTA and the Australian providers of
roaming services agree amongst themselves to introduce this basic information
standard.
4.55
Nothing in this suggested minimum should limit providers from providing
more information in other ways. In addition, nothing in this standard should
restrict the creation of innovative (and cost effective) pricing models by
providers.
4.56
To encourage the development of such a standard, the Committee
recommends that ACMA facilitate a meeting of the Communications Alliance to
develop such a minimum standard.
Recommendation 3 |
|
The Committee recommends that the:
n Australian
Communications and Media Authority facilitate a meeting of the Communications
Alliance to discuss the development of a minimum standard for consumer information
and awareness of roaming and potential costs; and
n Australian
Government explore opportunities to collaborate with the Australian
Telecommunications Users Group’s ‘Roam Fair’ campaign.
|
Temporary mobile number portability for roaming
4.57
Mobile number portability has been available to Australian consumers
since 2001. Mobile number portability allows consumers to retain their mobile
phone number when they change provider. Portability is administered under the Code
on mobile number portability developed by the Australian Communication
Industry Forum, now known as the Communications Alliance.[46]
4.58
The technical mechanisms involved in mobile number portability vary
depending on whether the customer is using a pre-paid or post-paid plan, and
the suite of services, such a messaging and fax services, included in the
customer’s mobile plan. Generally, ‘porting’ a number involves the customer
buying out the remaining plan with the provider they are leaving, and entering
into a new plan with the provider they are moving to. There may also be a fee
to cover the administration of the ‘port’.[47]
4.59
Mobile number portability was introduced to improve competition between
providers. Prior to the introduction of portability, a customer wishing to
retain their mobile number had to remain with the provider from whom they had
obtained the number, even if another provider was offering a plan more suitable
to the customer’s needs. Portability enables the customer to take their mobile
number to another provider, thus enhancing competition. [48]
4.60
The Committee believes that a similar arrangement in relation to roaming
might reduce the retail mark up through enhanced competition. The Committee’s
proposal involves allowing temporary number portability between Australian
operators for the time a customer uses roaming services overseas. This would
allow the customer to select the roaming plan offered by an Australian provider
that most suited their travel arrangements, and for the duration of their trip,
have access to that provider’s plan using their regular phone number. Temporary
number portability would be limited to roaming services only.
4.61
As all the administrative and technical arrangements are in place to
support portability, arranging temporary portability for roaming purposes
should not be an insurmountable task.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Communications
and Media Authority develop, through the Communications Alliance, an
amendment to the Code on mobile number portability to allow temporary
mobile number portability for roaming services. |
Providing advice on high bills
4.62
At the public hearing on 3 December 2008, the Committee spent some time
discussing with AMTA the possibility of advising customers when they are
incurring excessive charges while roaming to avoid them experiencing ‘bill
shock’.
4.63
AMTA’s representatives advised the Committee that the industry’s
strategy for dealing with large bills was a preventative one. Providers make
every effort to ensure that customers know beforehand that they will experience
higher charges using roaming. AMTA pointed out that large bills that cannot be
paid by the customers are rarely recovered, and turn into bad debts for the
provider, so the provider has some incentive to warn travellers about the costs
of roaming.[49]
4.64
Telstra provided further information on the possibility of advising
customers of large bills in a submission to the inquiry. Telstra does not have
a protocol for contacting customers who are incurring higher than usual charges
while roaming. There are a number of reasons for this, including that Telstra
advises travellers using its roaming service to expect higher bills, and that
it does credit checks to ensure travellers will be able to pay for roaming.
4.65
However, there is a technical barrier to being able to advise customers
of excessive charges. When customers are roaming overseas, there is a delay in
receiving billing information from the overseas carriers.[50]
Telstra advised the Committee that this problem only arises for post-paid
customers. Pre-paid phones operate on a different arrangement that allows
immediate information about the cost of a roamed call. Another advantage of
pre-paid phones is that there is a specific limit on the amount of money that
can be spent on roamed calls.[51]
4.66
The Committee understands that the possibility for near real time
costing information to be available for post-paid roaming customers is at least
two years away. Given that real time cost information is available to pre-paid
phone customers, it would appear to the Committee that the technological
infrastructure for providing real time cost information to post-paid customers
is already available.
4.67
The Committee encourages providers to utilise this technology for post
paid users to ensure customers receive billing information in a timely manner
and to reduce the risk of bill shock.
4.68
There is no simple solution to the problem of the cost of roaming. Australia’s small population means that Australian providers cannot offer the large client
base needed to negotiate a cheap wholesale price for roaming services.
4.69
As the wholesale price is negotiated with an overseas provider, it is
effectively beyond the reach of Australian regulators. Further, Australia is not part of an active economic region that could develop a regulatory response
that would be binding on its members, such as the EU. Australia will have to work bilaterally and multilaterally with single countries and trade
groups.
4.70
Users of roaming services hoping for costs to fall should not be in any
doubt that regulatory action will take time and is likely to only be
periodically successful.
4.71
Roaming users wishing to reduce the cost of staying in touch while
travelling may wish to consider some of the alternatives to roaming. These
alternatives are examined by the Committee in the next chapter.