| Sunday May 27 2001
Argument over 3G heats up as BT launches
bitter attack, claiming the auction process was nothing but a back-door tax
Argument over 3G heats up as BT launches bitter attack, claiming the auction
process was nothing but a back-door tax
In one of the harshest attacks yet on the hugely expensive auction for third
generation mobile licences, BT Ignite's chief executive Alfred Mockett today
accused the government of using the auction to tax consumers.
The 3G auction in the UK raised £22bn for government coffers which chancellor
Gordon Brown intends to use to pay off some of the national debt. According to
Mockett, the huge price paid by telcos in order to get their hands on spectrum
has had an impact on the current slump in the telecoms market.
Mockett believes the auction was little more than an excuse for government to
impose a backdoor tax. "It amounted to a pre-paid tax on consumers,"
he said at a keynote speech delivered at the annual Economist Telecommunications
Conference in London.
"The auction was played in an artificial market and operators paid twice as
much for licences than they would for building the networks. We were obliged to
bid or face becoming a bit player in our own market. The cost of the licence was
the cost of staying in business," Mockett said
He is sceptical about European governments' reasons for holding the auctions.
"Which finance minister could resist the urge to retire the national debt
in one fell swoop?" he asked. Across Europe the 3G auctions raised a total
of £62bn, about half of which was spent in the UK and Germany, the first two
countries to hold auctions.
Earlier this month consultancy group Northstream claimed that the five UK
licence holders will spend a total of £16bn building 3G networks and with
telcos feeling the pinch of the economic downturn there have been suggestions
that bitter rivals will have to become friends in order to finance the network
building.
The idea of network sharing is one that is endorsed by BT's Mockett. The EC's
Information Society Commissioner Erkki Likkanen also agrees that network sharing
may be essential to ensure a fast rollout of 3G services. But the UK government
opposes the move, keen to see a variety of networks on offer in order to keep
the market competitive. It has also rejected the idea of paying back some of the
money spent on spectrum.
In the current climate Northstream predicts that at least one of the UK's five
licence holders is bound to fail.
BT's attack comes on the day it acts to sort out its cumbersome £30bn debt,
asking shareholders to stump up £5.9bn and offering yet another restructuring
which will include the demerger of BT Wireless.
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