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Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association

Discover the economic significance of mobile broadband in Australia and its role in driving productivity gains across all sectors of the economy. Learn about the growth of 3G subscriptions, the consumer surplus gained by customers, and the importance of spectrum allocation for future infrastructure. Don't miss out on the unique opportunity presented by the digital dividend for optimal allocation and economic benefits.

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Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association

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  1. Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association Productivity - Connectivity - Mobility Mobile Broadband A Key Economic Driver

  2. Overview

  3. Latest data (June 30 2008)Australian Communications and Media Authority • The number of 3G subscriptions grew by 88% in 2007-08 from 4.6 million to 8.6 million • There were 22.12 million mobile phone services in Australia at June 30 2008, up from 21.26 million • The welfare gained by customers (consumer surplus) from using mobile telecommunications services was $3,287.80 million compared to $317.50 million for internet services. The ACMA report says the majority of the increase in the consumer surplus is attributable to changes in the mobile telecommunications sector as prices fell and subscriber demand grew • In estimating the consumer surplus for mobiles, ACMA calculated that mobile phone calls fell in price by 21.5% and the price of SMS/MMS decreased by 41.5%.

  4. Economic Contributions of Mobile Telecommunications Source: Access Economics 2008

  5. Mobile Broadband - economic contribution Why mobile broadband will continue to drive productivity gains across all sectors of the Australian economy *3G in Australia: HSPA mobile broadband boom, Ovum, 10 November 2008 **Australian Mobile Telecommunications Industry: Economic Significance and Contributions, Access Economics, 2008 ^ NextG Productivity Impacts Study, Concept Economics, 13 February 2009

  6. Demand for Mobile Broadband – Fact or Fiction? Broadband subscription forecast 2100 Fixed Mobile 1800 1500 1200 Subscriptions (Millions) 900 600 300 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Mobile Broadband includes: CDMA2000 EV-DO, HSPA, LTE, Mobile WiMAX, OtherFixed broadband includes: DSL, FTTx, Cable modem subs and other Mobile Broadband 2/3 of all subscriptions by 2012 Source: Ovum RHK & Internal Ericsson

  7. M.2078: 1720 MHz 2.3 GHz: 98 MHz M.2078: 1300 MHz ?? * For Tier 1 national markets M.2078: 840 MHz Spectrum bandwidth Dec 2013 919 MHz 793 MHz 700 MHz: 126 MHz 2.5 GHz: 190 MHz 3.6 GHz: 125 MHz 3G & LTE evolving to 4G 3G & HSPA LTE & 4G Today: 380 MHz 2G & 3G 3G, HSPA & LTE Australia 2010 2015 2020 Global Spectrum Demand Forecast 2010 - 2020 Source: ITU-R Report M.2078 (2007) Demand Forecast 2010-2020

  8. Retention of existing bands

  9. Getting the most out of the digital dividend • Spectrum Value Partners, ‘Getting the Most out of the Digital Dividend’, April 2009

  10. Getting the most out of the digital dividend

  11. Reallocation of 2.5 GHz for mobile use Australia urgently needs conformity with global band plan

  12. Summary • Mobile demand growth (3G) strong and prices falling – ACMA • Mobile economic contribution – direct and indirect – Access • Mobile Broadband – productivity enabling technology • Global and local demand for mobile broadband on the rise • Technology pathway – speed and capacity evolution • New spectrum allocations – critical future infrastructure • Key spectrum issues; • Retention of existing bands – re-issue licences • Digital Dividend (700MHz) – unique opportunity - $7 - $10 billion from optimal allocation – latest research • 2.5GHz spectrum band key to 4G and beyond • Australia must keep up.

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