Bolivia Telecoms, Mobile and Broadband Statistics and Analyses 2019 - ResearchAndMarkets.com

DUBLIN--()--The "Bolivia - Telecoms, Mobile and Broadband - Statistics and Analyses" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Although Bolivia has enjoyed strong economic growth in recent years, GDP remains among the lowest in South America. Many areas of the country outside the main cities are poor and undeveloped, and there is a sizeable proportion of the population which live in remote valleys and areas where telecom infrastructure has been chronically neglected. As a result, the penetration of telecom services is relatively low.

The structure of Bolivia's fixed telecom market is different from most other countries. Local services are primarily provided by 15 telecom cooperatives. These are non-profit-making companies privately owned and controlled by their users. Since the market was liberalised the cooperatives have also provided long-distance telephony, while several also offer broadband and pay TV services. They have invested in network upgrades in a bid to improve services for customers, and to expand their footprints.

Bolivia has a multi-carrier system wherein consumers can choose a long-distance carrier for each call by dialling the carrier's prefix. A number of operators have also adopted fixed-wireless technologies, and some rent fibre-optic capacity.

State-owned Empresa Nacional de Telecomunicaciones (Entel) is the country's incumbent long-distance operator, also offering local telephony, DSL and satellite pay TV services. Its subsidiary Entel Movil is Bolivia's largest mobile network provider.

Bolivia's fixed broadband services remain expensive, though the cost of bandwidth is only a fraction of what it was only a few years ago. Services are still unavailable in many rural and remote areas, and even in some of the major urban areas. Being a landlocked country, Bolivia has no direct access to submarine cable networks and must therefore connect to the rest of the world either via satellite or through terrestrial links across neighbouring countries. Fixed broadband services are fast migrating from DSL to fibre, while there are also cable broadband services available in some major cities.

Since it was renationalised in 2007 Entel has focused on providing telecom services in rural areas under a project known as Territory with Total Coverage'. This project aims to increase telecom coverage through mobile rather than through fixed networks.

Bolivia has more than ten times as many mobile phones as fixed lines, and the trend towards fixed-mobile substitution continues. Besides Entel, another two companies offer mobile telephony: Tigo, wholly owned by Luxembourg-based Millicom International, and NuevaTel, trading as Viva and controlled by US firm Trilogy International. A proposed deal to merge Millicom's business units in the region with those of Liberty Latin America was called off in February 2019.

All three mobile companies offer 3G services while LTE is available. Due to the poor quality, high cost, and poor reach of DSL, mobile networks have become the principal platform for voice services and data access. The take-up of services based on LTE has risen steadily as network builds have been increased. Tigo launched the first LTE services in mid-2014, followed by Viva in mid-2015 and by early 2019 both companies' networks reached more than 90% of the population. About 92% of all internet accesses are via smartphones.

Key Developments:

  • Viva sells about 600 towers to Phoenix Tower International;
  • Entel reiterates plans to extend fibre to all 339 municipal capital cities by 2022, launches Bolivia's first LTE-A network;
  • Government makes progress with National Broadband Plan to 2020;
  • Entel planning $60 million investment for new Pacific fibre cable route via Peru;
  • Bolivian Space Agency planning to launch a second telecom satellite after 2020;
  • Report update includes the regulators market data to September 2018, operator data to Q1 2019, Telecom Maturity Index charts and analyses, recent market developments.

Key Topics Covered:

1 Key statistics

2 Country overview

3 Telecommunications market

3.1 Market analysis

4 Regional Latin America Market Comparison

4.1 Telecom Maturity Index by tier

4.2 TMI versus GDP

4.3 Mobile and mobile broadband penetration

4.4 Fixed and mobile broadband penetration

5 Regulatory environment

5.1 Historical overview

5.2 Regulatory authority

5.3 Government policies

5.4 Telecommunications Law 2011

6 Fixed network operators

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Entel

6.3 Cooperatives

7 Telecommunications infrastructure

7.1 Overview of the national telecom network

7.2 International infrastructure

7.3 Infrastructure developments

8 Fixed-line broadband market

8.1 Introduction and statistical overview

8.2 Market analysis

8.3 Broadband statistics

8.4 Forecasts fixed broadband subscribers 2019; 2021; 2023

8.5 Government ICT plans

8.6 Fixed-line broadband technologies

9 Digital economy

9.1 eHealth developments

10 Mobile market

10.1 Market analysis

10.2 Mobile statistics

10.3 Mobile broadband

10.4 Forecasts mobile subscribers 2019; 2021; 2023

10.5 Regulatory issues

10.6 Mobile infrastructure

10.7 Major mobile operators

10.8 Mobile content and applications

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/1smq56

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Related Topics: Telecommunications and Networks, Broadband, Mobile Networks

Contacts

ResearchAndMarkets.com
Laura Wood, Senior Press Manager
press@researchandmarkets.com
For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470
For U.S./CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630
For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900
Related Topics: Telecommunications and Networks, Broadband, Mobile Networks