ARTICLE
3 August 2018

Recent Changes In Anatel"s Rules Aim To Foster Competition In The Telecommunications Markets

TA
TozziniFreire Advogados

Contributor

TozziniFreire Advogados logo
A leading full-service law firm in Latin America, TozziniFreire provides safe and innovative legal advice in 47 areas of corporate law. With offices in Brazil and NY, the firm features a unique structure based on industry groups and foreign desks with professionals recognized by the market and key legal guides.
The National Agency for Telecommunications (ANATEL) approved on July 12th, 2018, a new version of the general plan for competition targets.
Brazil Media, Telecoms, IT, Entertainment

Digital Law

The National Agency for Telecommunications (ANATEL) approved on July 12th, 2018, a new version of the general plan for competition targets. These new rules will be in force for the next four years. The text was under discussion and negotiation since 2016.

The main innovation introduced by these new rules is the creation of four large categories of Brazilian cities according to the level of competition in the telecommunications industry, ranging from highly competitive cities (category 1) to non-competitive cities (category 4). For each category, ANATEL may adopt different regulatory measures to correct the competitive asymmetries, or to encourage competition in the categories in which the provision of services is unfeasible without public policies.

Another innovation brought by the new general competition plan is the legal definition of Small Enterprise Provider (PPP, in Portuguese) as a company that holds a market share of less than 5% of the national retail market of telecommunications, and does not have a relationship with large providers, such as Oi, TIM, NET, Vivo, Claro, among others. Even though no rules with immediate effect have been enacted for the PPPs, the purpose of this definition is to make the regulatory obligations of the PPPs more flexible in the upcoming reviews of ANATEL’s rules, in order to foster competition through the deregulation of new and small companies.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mondaq uses cookies on this website. By using our website you agree to our use of cookies as set out in our Privacy Policy.

Learn More