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Accelerating Technology Convergence
By Michael Alan Hamlin
June 14, 1999

News reports of the First Pacific/PLDT bid for Home Cable have focused on the financial aspects of the deal, suggesting that First Pacific would sell the network to PLDT for a profit. While a good many analysts continue to view First Pacific as a deal-making machine, my own perspective is that First Pacific is much more strategic in its approach to opportunity than in the past. If so, the potential Home Cable acquisition represents a key component of the strategic initiatives of the conglomerate, and not just the chance for a quick buck.

The opportunity is what telecom and technology industry pundits call convergence of telephony, Internet technology, and broadcast entertainment. Convergence requires a large pipeline for the near-instantaneous transfer back and forth of billions of bits of voice, video, and data. While other technologies are emerging that offer the promise of high speed transmission, companies leading the convergence initiative like U.S. communications multinational AT&T have wondered why they must recreate the wheel when millions of homes around the world are already wired into cable.

To be sure, utilizing cable technology for two-way communication involves its own technology challenges, but those hurdles are gradually falling. For AT&T — now one of the world’s largest cable companies as well as long-distance telecommunications provider — cable offers the prospect for breaking up the monopolies of local telephony providers and increasing the amount of business it does with its customers.

Convergence is not just a developed economy "pipe" dream. Both China and Singapore are aggressively pushing convergence initiatives. In Singapore, 40,000 households are already linked up to a broadband network that provides video on demand, games, Internet access, video conferencing, and even medical examinations. China has 80 million cable subscribers, and has just announced the formation of a new company, China Network Communication (CNC), to be run by one of the region’s most successful Internet pioneers, Edward Tian.

CNC is China’s second telecommunications company, and has been set up to compete with a broken up China Telecom. According to reports, among the company’s first projects will be a convergence initiative that will link 15 Chinese cities with a fiber optic network. Another project involves linking an existing state-owned fiber network to China’s 80 million cable subscribers.

The reason Singapore and China are undertaking these initiatives is pretty clear, and it’s not a quick buck either. Because so much of competitiveness is tied to knowledge and using information resourcefully, convergence is a means to both introduce and make commonplace advanced technology to millions while providing the technology infrastructure enterprise requires to more efficiently and productively process and capitalize on information. Succinctly, it will make advanced technology as exotic as a refrigerator.

Since both Singapore and China compete with the Philippines — let’s be generous — for investment and opportunity, the Philippines and its private sector should take the threat of competitive national economies characterized by high-speed networked information flow at low costs seriously. Interestingly enough, the Philippines has had the basic components of convergence for quite some time, and even once led the region in cabling. However, it hasn’t capitalized on this advantage for two reasons. First, unlike Singapore and China, government doesn’t — and probably shouldn’t — take a direct financial interest in technology infrastructure initiatives. While government support of private-sector technology initiatives might be helpful, considering the way the Philippine government and bureaucracy operates, it’s probably better that they stay out of the way.

Second, like China and Singapore, there’s been very little competition. China is addressing this by breaking up China Telecom and forming the new, entrepreneurial CNC. Singapore is encouraging private-sector start-ups through subsidies, as well as underwriting its own network development initiatives. It’s interesting that between the two countries, it’s China that’s effectively fostering competition to catalyze rapid convergence.

In the Philippines, the Lopez group has had in place all the components involved in convergence: a cable network, a broadcast network, production facilities, an Internet provider, and a fledgling phone system. However, with no competition and no government "encouragement," the components have more or less been left to operate without a push for the synergy of convergence.

In the case of PLDT, the company has enjoyed the most elaborate telecommunications network in the country, is the leading international carrier, and invested several years ago in an Internet provider. Acquisition of Home Cable will put another piece of the convergence pie into place. If First Pacific and/or PLDT successfully acquire RPN9, the sequestered television station, like the Lopez group, First Pacific will have all the components required to drive convergence.

To get an idea of how competition will affect the speed of convergence in the Philippines — which, remember, is well behind the Singapore and China initiatives — consider the recent benefits of competition in the retail development and telecommunication industries. Development initiatives in retail by Henry Sy, First Pacific, and Fil-Invest have resulted in dramatic improvements in the quality of facilities, parking, walkways, and greenery in the Makati central business district, for instance.

In telecoms and mobile telephony, rates are down, quality is up, and customer service is thriving.

Technology convergence represents important strategic initiatives for both the First Pacific/PLDT and Lopez groups. Ultimately, however, the real beneficiary will be national competitiveness, as convergence lowers the cost of communications, makes people comfortable — and even reliant upon — advanced technology, and provides the technology infrastructure requisite to successfully compete in the global knowledge economy.

Thank goodness for competition and the introduction of strategy in Philippine enterprise development.

Copyright © 1999 The Events & Awards Managers of Asia and
Hamlin-Iturralde Corporation. All rights reserved.

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