Cabinet rejection of Telkom deal will cost jobs
The claim by the Department of Communications that it rejected the R3.3 billion Telkom deal because it ran counter to its plan to ‘improve access to information and communications technology services' does not stand up to scrutiny.
Cabinet, and indeed Minister of Communications Dina Pule, must stop pussyfooting around. She must show that there was sound business reasoning behind the decision not to support the sale of a 20% stake in Telkom to South Korean telecommunications giant, KT Corp.
The fact is that neither the government nor Telkom have the necessary funding and know-how to support critical expansions in communications infrastructure. The broadband rollout alone requires roughly R89 billion. In addition, it is common cause that insufficient funding has been allocated for the migration to Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT), which was meant to free up considerable spectrum for business and service delivery applications.
Most importantly, business expansion, economic growth and, ultimately, job creation are significantly constrained by Telkom's poor management of the ‘last-mile' of communications between exchanges and end-users in South Africa. If this government is serious about creating jobs, it needs to do all it can to grow the economy by attracting international investment and rolling out a world-class ICT infrastructure.
An experienced international partner could have gone a long way toward getting Telkom out of its innovation rut.