If Cable and Wireless Communications (CWC) acquires Columbus International and becomes a monopoly that could hurt the region's economic diversification, Felipe Noguera, communications specialist and one time secretary general of the Caribbean Association of National Telecommunication Organizations (Canto) warned yesterday.
"Jamaica has already fallen without a fight. The Eastern Caribbean is putting up a fight but Cable and Wireless is saying that they do not need them. The problem is the Eastern Caribbean do not have the wherewithal.
"The implications of a regional monopoly means higher prices for consumers, job losses and lack of innovation. The whole thrust of government diversification will be reduced, especially in those industries that are dependent on telecommunications," he said in his contribution to a breakfast seminar on the proposed CWC/Columbus merger. The seminar, which was hosted by the Communication Workers' Trade Union (CWU), took place at the union's headquarters on Henry Street, Port-of-Spain.
Noguera said the telecommunication sector is arguably more important than the energy industry for T&T, because whilie oil and gas will deplete and is non renewable, the telecommunication spectrum is a renewable resource.
"It can be used again and again with digital compression techniques and expanded almost infinitely," he said.
Last year, CWC entered into an agreement to acquire Columbus for US$3 billion. Critics, including Digicel's executive chairman Denis O'Brien, claim the merger will give CWC the opportunity to push out competitors and "own the market."
Noguera noted calls by Digicel officials in the Eastern Caribbean for strategies to combat the acquisition.
"Digicel was not speaking up for us but for their own reasons. Sometimes in a struggle you must make tactical alliances with people who may be your opponents. Where are the T&T and Caribbean players in all of this? The local credit union movement sits on $12 billion in assets and can leverage those assets to acquire shares in TSTT," he said
Noguera said the CWC/Columbus merger is the most important issue facing the country since it is "about the sovereignty of our nation. "
He said: "Tele-colonialism goes back a long way and Canto was formed to combat this version of colonialism and to educate our regional governments.
"When foreigners control your ability to communicate with each other it means we lose our ability to control our economic future."
Also speaking at the seminar was David Abdullah, political leader of the Movement for Social Justice (MSJ), who noted that advocates of privatization claim it brings diversity to the market. However, the reality is different from theoretical arguments, he said
Abdullah said the MSJ's position is that the people of T&T must control the strategic resources of the country.
"Look at Apple in the United States. They started off small and they grew big and acquired smaller companies. The same things happened with Microsoft and even in other industries like the airline industry. This is the concentration of capital in the hands of a few," he said.