|

Letters to the Editor

Telecommunications insanity

Tuesday, January 17, 2012



Dear Editor,

I heard it with my own ears but I could hardly believe it. Commenting on radio about the ongoing furore in the mobile industry, Minister Phillip Paulwell, instead of confronting the thorny issue of the Digicel/Claro deal, seemingly tried to sidestep the issue by saying that he believes that there is still room for at least one more player in the industry.

I therefore have to worry about the long-term future of this industry. Minister Paulwell just doesn't seem to get it, and one would have hoped that his nearly four years in Opposition would have helped his reasoning.

Minister, you granted a licence some years ago to AT&T. What happened there? Another licence was given to Claro, whose owner is the richest man in the world (Carlos Slim), and the millions he threw into the fray, mostly at Digicel, just bounced off like water running off a duck's back.

If neither of these two entities could have made a scratch in the stranglehold that Digicel has on the industry, which new player is going to be able to do so? And which new player is going to be crazy enough to invest, considering the current scenario where not even the deep pockets of Mr Slim could succeed?

Minister, what Jamaicans need is not another mobile company so that we are forced to continue to carry two or even three phones. What we need is to be able to buy one phone and call any network for roughly the same price, and then let the value offered by the respective companies determine where the customer spends his/her money.

Another player, Mr Minister? I don't think so. Fix what is easy to fix and help us to get out of the multiple-phone syndrome. I am not sure this exists anywhere else in the world.

Mr Paulwell, we have gone the route of another player twice before and it has made no difference. I remind you, if you need reminding, of the classic definition of insanity, whether you credit Ben Franklin or Albert Einstein: Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

Mark Rogers

Kingston 6



POST A COMMENT


You must first register and then login to be able to post a comment.

HOUSE RULES

 

1. We welcome reader comments on the top stories of the day. Some comments may be republished on the website or in the newspaper – email addresses will not be published.

2. Please understand that comments are moderated and it is not always possible to publish all that have been submitted. We will, however, try to publish comments that are representative of all received.

3. We ask that comments are civil and free of libellous or hateful material. Also please stick to the topic under discussion.

4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.

5. Please don't use the comments to advertise. However, our advertising department can be more than accommodating if emailed: advertising@jamaicaobserver.com.

6. If readers wish to report offensive comments, suggest a correction or share a story then please email: community@jamaicaobserver.com.

7. Lastly, read our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy, and before commenting you need to register, conveniently, by clicking the link above.



Comment (required):

You have characters left.
captcha fa0c06881afc4e11938e7c6b73416ddc
Enter text seen above:

For information about privacy please read our Privacy Policy.

I have read and accepted the Terms and Conditions


COMMENTS (4)

0o k
1/18/2012
Number Portability and Universal Broadband is the solution.
The Universal Access Fund should be used to offer Free Broadband to Jamaicans.
Fabian Williams
1/17/2012
Camille the point is that Paulwell as minister responsible for telecommunications issued 3 new mobile licences (Digicel, AT&T, Centennial Digicel renamed Claro). Only two of those licensees entered the market. In fact, the AT&T licence was sold to Digicel and few years back. Further most C’bbean countries have issued up to 3 additional mobile licences. Today most countries (except Cayman Islands) have two operators (LIME and Digicel). Thus, another third operator is unlikely to be feasible
Stanley Palmer
1/17/2012
Ah, Mr Rogers. Something really smells in the "State of Jamdung".
Ms Jones, are you wearing nose plugs? Will you get a clue?
camille jones
1/17/2012
The threat of the 3rd entrant will remain as powerful deterrent on Digicel and LIME abusing their position in Jamaica's new 2-player market.. If they fail to offer customers good value there are plenty of mobile phone companies looking for opportunities in the Caribbean.
The minister says that licences and spectrum are available for a new player. That will help protect Jamaican consumers a lot more than making Digicel waste money running 2 networks.

Include God in our children's lives

  0 comments

 

Portia, Andrew need to unite country

  2 comments

 

Eat-a-food culture disgraceful

  0 comments

 

That 'Gay Manifesto' not true

  0 comments

 

Can’t wait to hear what Google, Yahoo! have to say

  0 comments

 

How the elementary education system worked

  0 comments

 

Equity lacking in Jamaica

  1 comments

 

Assassination by anonymous e-mail is awful!

  0 comments

 

A supermarket policy that's illegal

  3 comments

 

Is this really healthy?

  2 comments

 

Three lessons from Armadale

  0 comments

 

Why risk the environment for oil?

  0 comments

 

Fire the West Indies cricket administrators

  0 comments

 

Kudos to James Newman and Philip Sherlock

  0 comments

 

Embrace positive values over lewdness

  0 comments

 

Well done so far, Mr Holness

  2 comments

 

Admiration for Archbishop Rowan Williams

  0 comments

 

A matter of vision

  0 comments

 

This is not about skin colour

  1 comments

 

Warring angels and the Aksum Kingdom

  0 comments

 

Today's Cartoon


Poll

 Do you feel buying into Facebook now is a good investment for the long-run? 
Yes
No

View Results

Results published weekly in Sunday Finance


Username:
Password: