3451.C 入世对我国电信业的影响及对策外文文献.doc
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1、China telecom industry introduction This article discusses the telecommunications industry in mainland China. For Hong Kong and Macau, see Communications in Hong Kong and Communications in Macau. For Taiwan (Republic of China), see Communications in the Republic of China. The telecommunications indu
2、stry in China is dominated by three state-run businesses: China Telecom, China Unicom and China Mobile. The three companies were formed by a recent revolution and restructuring launched in May 2008, directed by Ministry of Information Industry (MII), Nationals Development and Reform Commissions (NDR
3、C) and Minister of Finance. Since then, all the three companies gained 3G licenses and engaged fixed-line and mobile business in China.As a result of Chinas entry to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, a new regulatory regime is now being established and foreign operators are gradually being
4、 allowed to access the market. Although Chinese customers keep complaining that they need to pay higher prices for products and services and receive lower-quality services than customers in America or Europe, foreign travellers often feel that telecommunication services in China are cheap and conven
5、ient.citation neededAs Chinas 2nd generation of mobile communications equipment market is dominated by European and North American companies and because of the unique characteristics of mobile communications, most of Chinas mobile communications equipment demands are filled by imports. The quickly r
6、ising Chinese manufacturers, however, led by Huawei Technologies and ZTE are turning to South American, Southeast Asian and African countries for business opportunities and are increasingly raising their market share in China.As of 2009, Huawei Technologies is expected to surpass Nokia-Siemens Netwo
7、rks and Alcatel-Lucent to become the 2nd largest manufacturer of telecommunications equipment.In 2005, Chinas Ministry of Information Industry (MII), the most important government regulator in the telecommunications industry, projects that Chinese telecom carriers will invest $25 billion to recruit
8、45 million fixed line telephone subscribers and 58 million cellular phone users. MII expects the number of fixed line telephone users to reach 361 million and the penetration rate to reach 27.6% by the end of 2005 and the number of cellular users to reach 392 million and a penetration rate of 30%. W
9、ith such an investment, Chinese telecom carriers expect to generate revenues of USD 76.5 billion, 10.4% more than that in 2004.As of Aug-2009, there were a total of 720million mobile phones in active use, representing a penetration rate of 54% of the populationThe Chinese telecommunication sectors g
10、rowth rate was about 20% between 1997 and 2002. China fixed-line and mobile operators have invested an average of 25 billion US dollars on network infrastructure in the last years, which will be more than all western European carriers combined. As a result, with 1.3 billion citizens, China owns the
11、worlds largest fixed-line and mobile network in terms of both network capacity and number of subscribers.Only one out of ten Chinese citizens had a phone five years ago. Today more than one out of three have a fixed telephone subscription and more than 1.25 million cellular subscribers sign up in Ch
12、ina every week.Chinas accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) on December 11, 2001 resulted in the gradual opening of the telecom services market to foreign companies.Chinas two mobile operators, China Mobile and China Unicom, will continue to expand their mobile networks in 2005 in a way th
13、at not only increases network coverage but also gives flexibility to offer more data services to their customers. They will continue to have great demand for base stations, switches and network optimization solutions.edit Historical overviewBefore 1994, the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications (
14、MTP) provided telecom services through its operational arm, China Telecom. Pressured by other ministries and dissenting customers, the Chinese government officially started the telecom industry reforms in 1994 by introducing a new competitor: China Unicom. China Unicom could hardly compete with the
15、giant China Telecom.In 1998, due to a ministerial reorganization, the MTP was replaced by the new Ministry of Information Industry (MII). The MII took two large scale reshuffling actions targeting the inefficient state-monopoly.In 1999 the first restructuring split China Telecoms business into thee
16、parts (fixed-line, mobile and satellite). China Mobile and China Satcom were created to run, respectively, the mobile and satellsectors but China Telecom continued to be a monopoly of fixed-line services.The second restructuring in 2002 split China Telecom geographically into North and South: China
17、Telecom - North kept 30% of the network resources and formed China Netcom (CNC) and 70% of the resources were retained by China Telecom - South or simply the new China Telecom. Parallel to this double fission, the telecommunications division of the Ministry of Railways (MOR) established a new actor
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