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Opinion "Communicate,
Collaborate, Innovate" |
| Issue:
17/08 |
Consumer
Representation
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May
7,
2008
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A stronger voice for consumers – The Minister’s
Telecommunications Consumer Representation Stakeholder Forum
The forum was held on 1 May 2008 to identify ways to make consumer
representation in telecommunications policy more effective.
ATUG
took part in the Forum to ensure the interests of business users
of communications services were represented.
The forum discussed ways in which current consumer representation
strategies can be improved and concluded with a commitment from consumer
representatives to establish a peak telecommunications body representing
the diversity of consumer interests. ATUG looks forward to working
with the Consumer Peak Body in a coalition of demand side interests
on issues which are relevant to good outcomes for all types of consumers
in coming years.
The Minister was open in his views on the importance of making consumer
representation in telecommunications policy making more effective,
highlighting the issues consumers face in an environment of continual
technological change, globalisation, evolving market structures and
new business models.
Key issues included:
• making sure consumers were well-informed and could make good product
and service choices.
• improving current consumer representation strategies to give consumers
a stronger unified voice.
• empowering consumer representation and improving the interface between
consumer groups, industry, and
• strengthening the self-regulatory regime to achieve better outcomes
and better informed consumers.
The Minister first raised the issue of better representation for
the consumer voice at ATUG 2008:
“I am strongly committed to engaging with all stakeholders, and I
believe this is the best way to develop and implement policy.
There is no doubt increased competition, investment in infrastructure,
and the introduction of new technologies will provide many benefits.
However, a sustainable telecommunications industry ultimately relies
on maintaining a healthy relationship with consumers.
According to a recent OECD paper on Protecting and Empowering Consumers,
informed consumers are a necessary part of the mix.
They are able to stimulate innovation and competition, improving
quality of service and prices.
In balancing the needs of industry and consumers, self-regulation
is a key element of Australia 's current telecommunications regulatory
regime.
However, if industry self-regulation is to remain a viable form of
regulation for telecommunications, it is incumbent on the industry
to ensure that the interests of consumers continue to be adequately
represented and protected.
Unfortunately, there are signs that the interests of consumers are
falling behind in the current environment of increasing competition
and product complexity.
I am concerned about the recent increase in complaints to the TIO.
It is clear that industry members need to take greater responsibility
for dealing promptly with consumer complaints.
And they must be seen to be doing so by consumers, or risk undermining
confidence in the independent complaints resolution mechanism.
Development and implementation of industry codes of practice is another
area of concern.
From my perspective, industry doesn't appear to be in a hurry to
ensure these vital consumer protections are in place.
Industry members need to be much more responsive to the interests
of consumers, and respectful of the needs and experiences of individual
consumers.
To ensure that self-regulatory mechanisms continue to adapt to emerging
technologies and services, consumers need to be given a strong voice
in the development of codes and other protections.
And new arrangements need to be made quickly as issues emerge, and
they must be reviewed regularly as services evolve.
The Government is also looking at what it can do to enhance overall
consumer protection.
In particular I want to look at ways to give consumers a more powerful
voice in the development of telecommunications policy, and in particular,
industry codes.”
The full speech is available here
At the forum ATUG made the following comments:
•
The role of consumers to making markets effectively competitive is
key – empowered consumers making good decisions and being able
to switch providers with minimum angst is as important to effective
competition as access rules. ATUG supports the OECD work in this
area.
•
Self-regulation is only effective where industry faces incentives
to encourage good self-regulatory outcomes. ATUG’s experience
in raising broadband switching experiences is a case where without
incentives (from the ACCC) there was no industry interest in improving
customer switching processes. Mobile number portability is another
example where regulatory action was needed to spur industry action – with
a world class result for Australian consumers and an effectively
competitive mobile market in metropolitan areas at least.
•
End users need ongoing dialogue directly with the Minister. The issues
include availability/access/affordability, accessibility or "connectedness”,
information and choice, contract issues and complaints. Economic
efficiency and equity are both important to end users.
• Resource and information asymmetry are key issues to ensuring effective
representation of end user interests in policy development and regulatory
decisions. Funding needs to keep pace and be on a multi-year basis
to reflect the development of issues and skills needed.
• The role of the Consumer Peak Body would include:
o Representation
o Research
o Advocacy
o Review of outcomes – implementation, compliance, prices
o Information dissemination
• An effective Annual Meeting schedule would include at a minimum:
o Meeting with Minister
o Joint ACMA/ACCC Consumer Forum
o Meeting with Senior Departmental officers/Minister’s Advisers
o Joint ACMA/ACCC Consumer Forum
• A Transition Plan needs to be resourced to work through the scope
and details to allow the establishment and funding of the Consumer
Peak Forum
ATUG welcomes the Minister’s initiative in establishing the
Stakeholder Forum, in being clear about the issues that need addressing
and focused on good outcomes from communications policy and regulatory
activity for consumers as well as industry.
ATUG was pleased that the Minister is committed to telecommunications
specific consumer representation and is prepared to fund this activity
to ensure better outcomes.
** Details
for coming events will be forwarded via normal notice/event channels.
***This email has
been sent from: Lauren
McGinley, Australian Telecommunications Users
Group, Suite 506, Level 5, 815 Pacific HWY Chatswood
NSW 2067 |
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