Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
“Where the rubber hits the road” A presentation prepared for the 2030 Communications Vision Project Warwick Davis February 2015 ● Overview ● International comparisons ● Access ● Price ● Quality ● Outcomes ● Closing remarks 2 Frontier Economics High quality telecoms infrastructure at competitive prices is fundamental to the growth of the digital economy… Mobility, cloud computing, social networking, sensor-nets and big data analytics are some of the most important trends in the digital economy today. Collectively these trends are making possible the future of “smart everything” (i.e. grids, homes, business processes, energy, healthcare, transport and government), as well as empowering businesses, consumers and society at large. These new and future applications rely on the widespread availability of fixed and wireless broadband networks to meet the growing demands of economies and societies with a concomitant rise in the number of devices connected over the Internet. OECD, Measuring the Digital Economy: A New Perspective, 2014 3 …so, what do we know about Australia? Frontier Economics What dimensions should/can we compare? Network Fixed Services Measures Price Price baskets Affordability Quantity Availability Penetration Quality Speed Other quality (e.g. latency) Voice Consumer wants Mobile Service dimensions Broadband Usage Outcomes? 4 Frontier Economics Comparisons are hard, but necessary... Are we standing still? Data is limited ● Moving forward can be standing still, so we must compare progress with that of other countries. ● We consider rankings as well as absolute measures. ● Comparisons can be fraught. Easy to measure things that are not that useful. Data sets are often poor / untimely, and definitions are critical. ● There is not much breakdown between user types. ● Australia has some disadvantages (Large land mass, small population, relatively low urban density). Compare like-with-like ● But some advantages (our skilled workforce). ● As a result, it’s helpful to compare Australia to countries with similar endowments (Sweden, NZ and Canada). ...the following slides take up this challenge 5 Frontier Economics ● Overview ● International Benchmarks ● Quantity ● Price ● Quality ● Outcomes ● Closing remarks 6 Frontier Economics Quantity – availability/access ● Availability of (voice and broadband) services is of significant interest ● But it turns out to be hard to compare systematically across countries... •Approximately 9.9 million premises (91 per cent) have access to ADSL. •Approximately 3.1 million premises (28 per cent) have access to a high speed broadband platform (FTTP, FFTN, HFC or FW). •Approximately 8.8 million premises (81 per cent) have access to 3G mobile broadband services and about 6.4 million premises (59 per cent) have access to 4G services. 7 Dept. Of Communications, Broadband Availability and Quality Report, December 2013 Frontier Economics Quantity - penetration Fixed line voice has long been ubiquitous (+95%), but Australia is falling down the ranks in broadband penetration (13th to 21st)... Source: OECD Broadband Portal 8 Frontier Economics Quantity - penetration Overall rates show that there is not much variation within the rankings.... ...but peer comparison suggests this may not be quite as concerning as it appears Source: OECD Broadband Portal .... Fixed penetration is just below the OECD average 9 Frontier Economics Quantity - usage Low usage of data for those that have broadband – likely linked to quality and price OFCOM - The International Communications Market 2014 10 Frontier Economics Quantity A different story in mobile? Rank highly in mobile penetration Source: OECD Broadband Portal .... Wireless penetration rates are among the highest in the world 11 Frontier Economics Quantity Australia is way above the OECD average for wireless penetration Australia has low fixed, high mobile. In other OECD countries there is a positive correlation... Source: OECD Broadband Portal . 12 Frontier Economics Quantity Australians have been rushing to have dedicated mobile broadband connections... “Nearly 20% of mobile connections are dedicated broadband data” These data are also suggestive of fixedmobile substitution... Source – OFCOM - The International Communications Market 2014 13 Frontier Economics Quantity We have been more successful in getting fixed connections to some important areas, like schools… Source: OECD 14 Frontier Economics ● Overview ● International Benchmarks ● Access ● Price ● Quality ● Outcomes ● Closing remarks 15 Frontier Economics 1st rank - Cheapest Price A comparison of “baskets” of fixed line calls 33rd rank (for business) – Most expensive 34th rank (for residential) – Most expensive All prices are in PPP terms, which reflect international differences in purchasing power. Fixed voice is expensive Including in relation to peers like Canada 16 Source: OECD, Sept 2012 There are 33 countries in the Business data sample. Frontier Economics 1st rank - Cheapest Price 34th rank – Most expensive A comparison of “baskets” of fixed broadband Fixed broadband is also expensive Does not fare as badly in comparison to peers, like Sweden 17 Source: OECD, Sept 2012 There are 34 countries in the data sample unless otherwise stated Frontier Economics Price – summary on fixed Across (V)oice and (B)roadband, we are some way behind the average Source: OECD 18 Frontier Economics 1st rank - Cheapest Price 34th rank – Most expensive A comparison of “baskets” of mobile voice + data prices Mobile prices fare comparatively much better… Source: OECD 19 Frontier Economics 1st rank - Cheapest Price 34th rank – Most expensive A comparison of “baskets” of mobile broadband prices .…including mobile broadband Source: OECD 20 Frontier Economics ● Overview ● International Benchmarks ● Access ● Price ● Quality ● Outcomes ● Closing remarks 21 Frontier Economics Quality Fixed broadband quality is behind the pack… Country Average connection speed Mbps Global Rank Country Average Peak Connection Speed Mbps Global Rank Australia 6.9 44 Australia 36 44 New Zealand 7 42 New Zealand 32 50 Sweden 14.1 5 Sweden 54 12 Canada 10.3 21 Canada 43.7 22 Global Avg 4.5 - Global Avg 24.8 - South Korea 25.3 1 Hong Kong 84.6 1 Country High Broadband connectivity >10Mbps Global Rank Australia 14% 40 New Zealand 14% 42 Sweden 44% 10 Canada 33% 21 Global Avg 23% - South Korea 81% 1 Clearly behind many non-OECD countries Source: Akamai – State of the internet – Q3 2014 22 Frontier Economics Quality Mobile broadband quality is less cause for concern.. Speedy ● According to Ofcom, 20% of total mobile data connections were 4G in 2013 (Source: OFCOM) Country Avg. Mbps Peak Mbps % Above 4Mbps Australia 3.9 68.9 25% New Zealand 3.3 21 32% Sweden 7.3 36.9 94% Canada 7.9 28.7 71% Source: Akamai – State of the internet – Q3 2014 23 Frontier Economics ● Overview ● International Benchmarks ● Access ● Price ● Quality ● Outcomes ● Closing remarks 24 Frontier Economics Outcome Telecoms revenue as a percentage of GDP is near the OECD average We spend a bit more than comparators Source: OECD iLibrary 25 Frontier Economics Outcome Telecoms employment is higher than OECD average Telecoms employment is twice OECD average Source: OECD iLibrary 26 Frontier Economics Outcome ICT related patents We are not at the forefront of ICT, and more of our energy is going into other things Source: OECD – Measuring the digital economy 27 Frontier Economics Outcome ICT service exports …and our share of service exports is dropping Source: OECD – Measuring the digital economy 28 Frontier Economics ● Overview ● International Benchmarks ● Access ● Price ● Quality ● Outcomes ● Closing remarks 29 Frontier Economics Closing remarks Relatively, Australia fares poorly in fixed line comparisons but well in mobile comparisons The causes of this are probably complex, but relative pricing may be a factor 30 Reinforces the need to “get the NBN right” How do we make sure we build what (all kinds of) consumers want, and price it correctly? Frontier Economics Frontier Economics Pty Ltd in Australia is a member of the Frontier Economics network, which consists of separate companies based in Australia (Brisbane, Melbourne & Sydney) and Europe (Brussels, Cologne, London and Madrid). The companies are independently owned, and legal commitments entered into by any one company do not impose any obligations on other companies in the network. All views expressed in this document are the views of Frontier Economics Pty Ltd. 31 Frontier Economics FRONTIER ECONOMICS PTY. LTD. MELBOURNE | SYDNEY Frontier Economics Pty Ltd, 395 Collins Street, Melbourne, Vic 3000 Tel. +61 (0)3 9620 4488 Fax. +61 (0)3 9620 4499 www.frontier-economics.com 32 Frontier Economics