Cost Plan Methodologies
Cost-oriented prices and cost models
Many years ago before the telecommunication market was liberalized in the Caribbean and Latin American countries, basic telephony was a natural monopoly and therefore incumbent players many times passed on each and every cost, regardless whether efficient or not, through to the end-customer.
The creation of autonomous entities to regulate operators in terms of usage of resources and tariff-setting began at the end of the 1990’s as these markets we being liberalized, by the pressure from small services and call-back providers. As the incumbent monopolistic operators were usually government owned, liberalization was delayed for many years.
Due to the fact that many of these incumbents were government owned and back then considered the largest contributors of funds to these government’s budgets, tariffs were therefore way out of line compared to actual costs.
Considering the obvious link between the telecommunications industry and economic and social development, countries began looking more realistically at tariff structures, compared to other developed countries and how these referred to the underlying costs.
With the entrance of new operators and the evolution of new services heightened the need to bring the regulated prices of the monopolies in line with costs, while at the same time public interest and general well-being became one of the requirements of the regulators.
In a liberalized market, the task of a regulator is to ensure that operators have equal rights and possibilities to compete within the same market and therefore rules are established and interconnection with other operators made obligatory. This guarantees the principle of non-discrimination and equal treatment with the possibility for each party to appeal or request arbitration.
In order to guarantee equal treatment and non-discrimination, regulators have the task to monitor price-setting or, at least the orientation of interconnect prices. The bottom line in majority of cases results in an obligation upon the dominant operator or operator(s) with significant market power to utilize one of the most commonly used cost allocation models, indicated by the regulator.
Our consultancy firm has many years of experience applying the following cost methodologies:
- Historical Costs (“HC”)
- Forward-Looking Costs (FLC”)
- Current Costs (“CC”)
- Fully allocated costs (“FAC”)
- Activity-Based Costing (“ABC”)
- Long-Run Incremental Costs (“LRIC”)
- Bottom-Up Long-Run Incremental Costs (“BULRIC”)