Tanzania's economy has been showing solid growth rates of
between 5% and 8% every year since 2000, and for the period 2013-2017, the
International Monetary Fund predicts stable GDP growth at around 7% per annum.
Tanzania has two fixed-line operators (TTCL and Zantel)
and eight operational mobile networks, with four additional players licensed
under a new converged regulatory regime. With four major operators - Vodacom,
Bharti Airtel (formerly Zain), Tigo and Zantel - mobile penetration is
approaching 70%, with annual subscriber growth of more than 20%. In recent
years a price war among these players has adversely affected the smaller
operators, which have suffered from customer churn.
The new converged licensing regime has brought a large
number of new players into the market. The liberalisation of voice over
internet protocol (VoIP) telephony as well as the introduction of third and
fourth generation (3G, 4G) mobile services and wireless broadband networks is
boosting the internet sector which has been hampered by the low level of
development of the traditional fixed-line network.
Following the launch of 3G mobile broadband services, the
mobile networks are becoming the country's leading internet service providers
on the back of their extensive national infrastructure and existing subscriber
bases in the voice market. Operators are hoping for revenue growth in the
mobile data services market, given that the voice market is almost entirely
prepaid and voice ARPU continues to fall. To this end they have invested in
network upgrades, with both Vodacom and Smile Communications developing
services based on Long-term Evolution (LTE) technology. A fast developing
source of revenue is from mobile money transfer and m-banking services. In
mid-2013 Bharti Airtel estimated that in Tanzania over 10% of GDP is transacted
through mobile commerce.
In March 2013 the regulator reduced interconnection rates
by 70%. Combined with a stringent registration policy, requiring new customers
to have a physical ID, the reduced rates dampened growth in the number of
mobile subscribers for some operators.
The landing of the first fibre optic international
submarine cables in the country in recent years has revolutionised the market
which up to that point completely depended on expensive satellite connections.
In parallel, the government has switched on the first phase of a national fibre
backbone network to connect population centres around the country. However, the
cost of international internet bandwidth has so far not come down by as much
and not as quickly as expected.
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