Mongolia – telecoms, mobile and internet

Since the Mongolian Government’s telecommunications reform
program in the mid-1990s, there has been effective liberalisation of all market
segments, partial privatisation of the fixed-line incumbent operator, Mongolia
Telecom, and establishment of an independent regulator. Mongolia acceded to the
WTO in 1997.
Competition is in place for both fixed and mobile telephony
including local, long-distance and international, internet, VoIP and VSATs. The
internet market is a growing sector supported by government initiatives such as
the e-Mongolia National Program and ICT Vision 2021.
Although the fixed-line network is declining as per other
markets in Asia, the mobile phone market has seen strong growth, spurred by the
launch of 3G networks more recently and the increased popularity of smart
phones. The national policy has been to have a competitive telecommunications
segment with two CDMA and two GSM mobile telephone service operators.
Accordingly, two additional mobile licences were awarded in 2005/06 to Unitel
(GSM) and rural mobile operator G-Mobile (CDMA).
As part of the transition to a market-based economy, Mongolia
committed itself to modernising its telecommunications network and steadily
introducing advanced communications services. The government considers national
infrastructure development as a high priority and, in particular, it has
focused on the development of the telecoms sector, seeing it as central to the
overall development of the country, the improvement of living standards,
increasing foreign investment, boosting tourism and private sector development,
and implementation of innovative changes.
Market highlights:
Cabinet approved Mongolia’s first satellite, highlighting the
country’s ambitions for improving ICT and transforming into a knowledge-based
economy by 2021.
In addition to the satellite project, the National Broadband
Programme (2011-15) is a government plan to ensure that over 50% of households
have access to inexpensive broadband connections for bandwidth-intensive
services, high-speed internet and television.
The government also plans for 40% of households in remote
areas to have access to a wireless broadband service.
Mongolia has been quickly rising through the ranks of global
networking surveys. In the Networked Readiness Index 2011-12 released by the
World Economic Forum, Mongolia achieved 63th place out of the 143 counties
surveyed compared to 85th out of 138 nations in 2010-11.
Coverage in rural areas improved in 2013, with a World
Bank-funded project creating a network of 152 satellite public telephones for
herders in remote areas beyond the reach of mobile networks.
4G or long-term
evolution (LTE) technologies were expected to be deployed in the next few years
as the market shifts from traditional voice and message services and their
associated declining margins, to a future revenue stream from services such as
IPTV, high-speed mobile internet, VoIP, content and applications.
Mongolia key telecom parameters 2011 -2014
Sector | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 (e)
Internet users | 344,000 | 459,000 | 520,000 | 580,000
Fixed-line subscribers | 187,000 | 200,000 | 210,000 |
220,000
Mobile phone subscribers | 2.90 million | 3.40 million | 4.25
million | 4.50 million
Mobile penetration rate | 104% | 115% | 142% | 145%
Mongolia is a small country with predominantly basic
telecommunications services. The report covers trends and developments in
telecommunications, mobile, internet and broadband. Subjects include:
Market and industry
analyses, trends and developments;
Facts, figures and
statistics;
Industry and
regulatory issues;
Infrastructure;
Major players,
subscribers;
Internet;
Mobile voice and
data markets;
Broadband (FttH,
DSL, cable TV).
Source: http://www.telecom-marketresearch.com/mongolia-telecoms-mobile-and-internet.html
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