Bangladesh has discovered a way to
grow its telecom sector in spite of the odds. It remains one of the poorest,
most densely populated, least developed countries in the world; yet it has
somehow managed to show considerable spirit in the development of its telecoms
and associated activity. This nation of almost 160 million people, with its
comparatively low GDP per capita, has been involved in the creation of a very
competitive mobile telephone market, especially its mobile market segment. Most
noticeable also has been the willingness of Bangladesh to encourage foreign
participation in these endeavours.
Following a number of boom years
of expansion, the Bangladesh mobile market started showing signs of the growth
moderating in 2009. This easing has continued through 2012 and into 2013. There
had been a truly stellar year in 2007 with the mobile subscriber base
increasing by 70%. Growth eased to around 30% and eased further to less than
20% by 2012, with the country’s mobile subscriptions reaching almost 100 million
by end-2012. By late 2014 the subscriber numbers were approaching 120 million.
The strong growth in mobiles has
been helped enormously by the deregulation of the country’s telecom sector. The
rapid uptake of mobile services was no doubt at the expense of the struggling
fixed-line sector, with low levels of teledensity and general shortcomings in
fixed network infrastructure. The success of the mobile market, however, has
been achieved in a country that continues to struggle with its lowly economic status,
its frequent natural disasters such cyclones and floods and the slow
implementation of much-needed economic reforms.
Despite a progressive regulatory
regime, the country was slow to move forward with 3G mobile services. The first
3G licence in the country was awarded to Teletalk, the state-owned operator
launching a pilot 3G offering in late 2012. The 3G licensing process for
private operators was meant to follow quickly but became bogged down. The
planned auction was finally held in September 2013. Four operators -
GrameenPhone Banglalink, Robi Axiata and Bharti Airtel - acquired 3G spectrum
in the auction, setting the scene for further developments in the market place.
The operators moved quickly to launch their respective offerings and by March 2014
there were around 2.5 million 3G subscribers in total.
The fixed-line segment of the
local telecom market has had a very difficult time of late. For years
teledensity has remained essentially stagnant at less than 1%, by far the
lowest in South Asia. The country had been struggling with its underdeveloped
telecommunications infrastructure and heavy bias towards the four main cities.
Then, as the country struggled to put an effective telephone network in place,
the fixed market experienced a major setback in 2010. The regulator shut down
five of the country’s fixed-line operators because of their alleged illegal
activities. As a consequence, within a two month period the number of fixed
services in operation had fallen from 1.7 million to around one million. The
market has since recovered to some extent but it was nevertheless a major
setback for the telecom sector and there were ongoing repercussions.
The internet usage has been
growing quickly in Bangladesh, although obviously this was happening from a
very low base. With an estimated internet user-base of close to 10 million (a
7% user penetration) coming into 2014, the number of people using the internet
had more than doubled in just three years. The local internet industry was
obviously preparing to move into the next stage of its development. The country
must work hard, however, to overcome obstacles associated with the country’s
lowly economic status and still developing ICT infrastructure. Broadband
internet is in its infancy, but the country has started moving on a number of
fronts into wireless based services and has embraced mobile internet in a big
way. This is important because the range of technologies on offer help overcome
some of the infrastructure limitations and left the nation into a broadband
regime.
One initiative to note, the
government has launched what it calls the Digital Bangladesh (DB) strategy;
this is aimed at creating a digitised government, ICT-enabled services,
nationwide internet connectivity, a high-tech park for businesses and
ICT-trained human resources by 2021.
Spanning over 84 pages, 41 Tables, 5 Charts
and 5 Exhibits “Bangladesh - Telecoms,
Mobile, Broadband and Forecasts” report Covering Key Statistics,
Telecommunications Market, Regulatory Environment, Fixed Network Operators,
Telecommunications Infrastructure, Internet Market, Broadband Market, Digital
Media / Digital Economy, Mobile Communications, Forecasts.
Know more
about this report at – http://mrr.cm/Zvy
Find all Broadband Reports
at: http://www.marketresearchreports.com/broadband
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