Qed

A casualty of the Liberal implosion?

It seems that the government’s plan to achieve structural separation of Telstra are not going to make it through the Senate this year. Hours of debate over the CPRS (Continue Polluting Regardless Scheme) has meant the bills will now sit in the todo list until next year.

Of course the bills were part bluff to start with. Conroy was using two devices to get Telstra to talk, one was the threat of legislation, the other was in the form of government approval of RF spectrum sales. Between these two measures Telstra has very little option but to accede to the governments wishes. However as the CCC notes in their press release almost a month ago, the proposed bill includes scrutiny of any deal done between the government and Telstra by the ACCC. A deal done under existing laws is effectively outside of this provision.

So what? Well as the CCC puts it rather bluntly, there is a lot of potential here for a handshake deal done in secret while the bills languish over the summer recess. Telstra is no fan of the ACCC and would no doubt prefer a deal with the government that avoided the scrutiny of the ACCC. It also means that public benefits from competition might be traded away in such negotiations leaving Telstra in a stronger market position than it might otherwise have been.

Still with all the media attention on the Liberal party and the CPRS, it’s easy to see how this little matter might have escaped their otherwise eagle eyed vigilance of government business.

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Posted 9 months, 1 week ago at 5:48 am.

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Telstra forced to separate – iTnews.com.au

This morning The Oz were putting on a brave face for Telstra with this Wireless puts broadband at risk | The Australian. Telstra owns the biggest wireless network in the country although reading the Oz’s story you might be excused for thinking that the issue was the plan to install fibre to the home. But all that’s history now after Stephen Conroy’s announcement to split the Telstra monopoly, an announcement that is long, long overdue. The private monopoly that is Telstra should never have been allowed in the first case and has simply strangled communications innovation in this country, all to prop up the asset value.

A small step in the right direction for Conroy. Of course given the market driven mantra still dominating debate its unlikely that the Government will adopt the next logical step and retain the New National Broadband Network as a public utility. The NBN has already been flagged for privatisation once it is making a buck, so it would seem that the government’s concern for monopolies only extends to Telstra.

BREAKING: Telstra forced to separate – Telco/ISP – Technology – News – iTnews.com.au.

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Posted 11 months, 3 weeks ago at 7:06 pm.

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