The North African telecommunications market experienced 14 percent growth in 2002, after record growth in 2000 and 2001. The telecom services market in the region is expected to rebound to a 20 percent growth in 2003. The increase will be driven by a resumption of growth in the Egyptian telephony and mobile market, and a boom in Algeria and Tunisia’s mobile revenue, according to a recent IDC study.
Both the mobile and telephony markets in the North African markets could have experienced much higher growth during the year, had it not been for the macroeconomic conditions in the Egyptian market. “The continuation of the economic recession in Egypt, along with the country’s currency devaluation, dampened the growth in the local market, and affected revenue for the country in dollar terms,” explained Senior Analyst in IDC CEMA's Telecommunications Group, Mohsen Malaki.
Having reached a total value of $3.79 billion in the year 2001, the North African market is forecast to grow to $7.19 billion by 2006. Mobile services should see the strongest growth over this period, followed by managed data network services. IDC's study revealed that despite the expansionary efforts of monopoly fixed-line operators, the fixed-line telephony market experienced the slowest revenue growth, at two percent.
Local telephony, including voice and Internet calls, is projected to increase modestly through 2006, long distance is forecast to show declining growth, while fixed-to-mobile calls will witness the fastest growth in the telephony market, to reach a value of $552 million in 2006.
Even though mobile was the fastest growing segment of telecommunications network services in 2002, the rate of growth was lower than that of the year 2001. This can be attributed to economic slowdowns in Morocco and Egypt, along with a shift in operator strategies in both countries.
North Africa should see above 25 percent annual revenue growth in 2003 and 2004 as penetration rates in Algeria and Tunisia increase with the marketing of prepaid services to the mass market, according to the IDC report.
Tunisia in particular is expected to see rapid subscriber acquisition by the two operators early on in the forecast period, as Tunisie Telecom becomes aggressive in defending its market share from the new entrant. “The difference in the anticipated reaction of the incumbents will also influence the entry strategy of the new competitor, which in both countries is Orascom Telecom, although Kuwait’s Wataniya is an equal partner in the Tunisian operation,” said Malaki.
IDC expects Orascom to push prepaid aggressively and early on in Tunisia to catch up with the incumbent, while in Algeria it will skim the market for high-end contract users as the incumbent negotiates its network expansion contract with vendors.
“With the exception of Morocco, where operators are expected to shift strategies to usage growth in 2003, these trends will result in a return to high growth in prepaid connections for the rest of the region, in 2003,” explains Malaki. This should continue until 2006, when operators in Tunisia and Algeria will also shift strategies from prepaid growth to growth in usage, while attempting to migrate high-end prepaid subscribers to contract subscriptions. — (menareport.com)
© 2003 Mena Report (www.menareport.com)