Mobile Communications Is Uniquely Placed to Drive Economic Growth


BARCELONA, Spain, February 16 /PRNewswire/ --

- Industry leaders call for governments to focus on mobile broadband 
stimulus

Mobile World Congress -- At the GSMA's Leadership Summit, bringing
together 400 CEOs, government ministers and officials, industry leaders today
stressed the unique role that broadband, specifically mobile broadband, can
play as an economic stimulus. Those leaders called for governments to support
the rollout of mobile broadband services to drive economic growth.

Speaking at a press conference led by Rob Conway, CEO of the GSMA,
Carl-Henric Svanberg, CEO of Ericsson, Alexander Izosimov, Chairman of the
GSMA and CEO of VimpelCom, Franco Bernabe, CEO of Telecom Italia, Jon Fredrik
Baksaas, CEO of Telenor Group and Jeffrey Sachs, Director of The Earth
Institute at Columbia University, set out how the wider use of mobile
broadband services can stimulate growth and help the world recover from the
economic crisis. Wang Jianzhou, CEO of China Mobile, spoke about the
investment in mobile infrastructure that his company is making in China and
its benefits.

The release of new spectrum for mobile broadband services in 2009 will
ultimately add the equivalent of US$211 billion to China's GDP, and could add
the equivalent of US$95 billion to India's GDP(1), according to a new report
by Professor Leonard Waverman and consultancy LECG for the GSMA, which
represents the global mobile industry. The rollout of mobile broadband
networks will create hundreds of thousands of jobs, encourage new businesses
across the value chain, improve productivity and boost consumer spending.

As the mobile industry is one of the few parts of the private sector
currently capable of providing an economic stimulus, governments need to
ensure they adopt policies that encourage more investment in mobile services
and networks. Wherever possible, governments should seek to create a stable
regulatory environment, while licensing spectrum on the right terms to
encourage spending on network infrastructure and services, stimulating
economic growth.

It is also important that governments allocate the same spectrum as other
governments in their region for mobile broadband services - this kind of
harmonisation will allow the same devices to be used in many different
countries and enable manufacturers to achieve economies of scale and lower
prices for end users.

The switchover to digital television will present a once-in-a-generation
opportunity to make low-frequency spectrum, in which radio waves travel long
distances and better penetrate the walls of buildings, available for mobile
broadband services. Of the 400MHz of low-frequency spectrum freed up by the
switch-off of analogue television, the GSMA believes 100MHz should be used to
enable the roll out of cost-effective mobile broadband networks.

Deploying a mobile broadband network using 700MHz spectrum, for example,
can cost 70% less than deploying the same network using the 2100MHz spectrum
underpinning most of today's 3G mobile networks, making rural areas and other
"white spots" economically viable to serve. Moreover, providing mobile
broadband coverage is far more cost-effective than installing a new
fixed-line broadband connection(2).

Supporting Quotes

"For mobile broadband to be a mass-market service worldwide and powerful
engine of economic growth, the mobile industry needs both a stable regulatory
climate and access to the right spectrum on the right terms," said Rob
Conway, CEO and Member of the Board of the GSMA. "Wherever possible,
governments need to allocate the same chunks of spectrum as other countries
in their region, enabling equipment manufacturers to gain economies of scale
by producing mobile broadband handsets, computers and other devices that will
work in many different markets."

"If the mobile industry can continue to grow and develop at the rate it
has over the past 15 years, it could act as one of the few locomotives which
can help pull our economies out of the current slump," said Alexander
Izosimov, Chairman of the GSMA and CEO of VimpelCom. "Governments need to
adopt policies that nurture this potential, rather than stifling it."

"The rolling out and operation of 3G networks in China will create
300,000 job opportunities directly and indirectly," said Wang Jianzhou,
Chairman and CEO of China Mobile. "On the one hand, 3G investments will
directly boost the development of the telecom manufacturing industry; on the
other hand, 3G handsets and 3G applications will drive consumer spending and
help companies through the difficulties brought by the financial crisis."

"The evolution of mobile broadband is proof that capital expenditure by
operators lays the foundations for the growth of an entire ecosystem," said
Franco Bernabe, CEO of Telecom Italia. "In the currently uncertain economic
climate, it is simply unimaginable that we will enter a new phase of European
and worldwide growth if we do not have sufficient availability of bandwidth.
Bandwidth is the necessary driver for direct investments such as radio access
infrastructure and demand for fibre-optic backhauling; it is also a driver of
indirect investment, through the emergence of new market players and new
services. If we wish to repeat the successes of the past - successes in
technology that, from GSM onwards, have made improvements to our lives - this
potential may only be realized fully within a harmonious regulatory context."

"Our industry and the authorities must work together to find sustainable
business models for mobile broadband," said Jon Fredrik Baksaas, President
and CEO, Telenor Group. "If we get this right, mobile broadband will have the
same deep changing impact on people's lives as basic mobile services have
had."

"Mobile broadband is essential for socio-economic growth and, with LTE,
the industry has, for the first time, a true global standard," said
Carl-Henric Svanberg, President and CEO of Ericsson. "The deployment of
mobile broadband is also particularly important for closing the digital
divide and the allocation of low-frequency spectrum is a prerequisite."

"Mobile technologies are the most powerful tools we have for combating
extreme poverty in the most isolated parts of the world," said Jeffrey Sachs,
Director of the Earth Institute. "By closing the digital divide, mobile
connections give the poor access to vital health services and students from
all parts of the world a chance to learn through 'global classrooms.'
Similarly, mobile phones are being deployed to expand agro-business,
e-governance, banking, and commerce throughout poor countries. Private
companies are taking in the lead in countless creative and path-breaking
efforts, and these breakthroughs are being expanded rapidly through
public-private partnerships. Digital technologies will play a core role in
ending poverty and in enabling the world to join together through markets,
social networks, and cooperative efforts to solve our common challenges."

Notes to Editors:

In Europe, Finland, Sweden, Switzerland, France and the UK have already
committed to allocating some of the spectrum freed up by the switchover to
digital television to mobile broadband services.

About the GSMA

The GSMA represents the interests of the worldwide mobile communications
industry. Spanning 219 countries, the GSMA unites more than 750 of the
world's mobile operators, as well as 200 companies in the broader mobile
ecosystem, including handset makers, software companies, equipment providers,
Internet companies, and media and entertainment organizations. The GSMA is
focused on innovating, incubating and creating new opportunities for its
membership, all with the end goal of driving the growth of the mobile
communications industry. For more information, please visit
http://www.gsmworld.com

(1) The long-term impact on GDP, on a purchasing power parity basis,
resulting from a projected investment of US$59 billion in 3G networks in
China over the next three years and an investment of US$20 billion in
India over the next five years.

(2) The World Bank estimates that connecting an individual to a mobile
network can cost one-tenth of the cost of providing a new fixed-line
connection.

© PR Newswire Association LLC.

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