Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications
Mexico is one of the first few countries in Latin America to liberalise its telecommunications market. The Mexican government started re-structuring the telecommunications industry in the late 1980s, to prepare the industry for the eventual opening of the market to foreign competition under the Nort...
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2008
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-74462024-01-12T10:08:56Z Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications Liew, Rosalind Pieak Yoke Ng, Tee Chiou Ngien, Timothy Hoon Chay Yam, Kum Weng Low, Valerie Chuen Chuen Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Industries and labor Mexico is one of the first few countries in Latin America to liberalise its telecommunications market. The Mexican government started re-structuring the telecommunications industry in the late 1980s, to prepare the industry for the eventual opening of the market to foreign competition under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) arrangement. The state-owned telecommunications monopoly, Telefonos de Mexico (Telmex), was privatised in 1990. The Federal Telecommunications Law was enacted in 1995 which allowed up to 49% foreign ownership in firms providing most telecommunications services. Many licences have been issued since to local and foreign players for various telecommunications services. The long distance market was liberalised in 1997 - a key milestone in Mexico. Master of Business Administration 2008-09-18T07:45:49Z 2008-09-18T07:45:49Z 2000 2000 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/7446 en Nanyang Technological University 75 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Business::Industries and labor Liew, Rosalind Pieak Yoke Ng, Tee Chiou Ngien, Timothy Hoon Chay Yam, Kum Weng Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications |
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Mexico is one of the first few countries in Latin America to liberalise its telecommunications market. The Mexican government started re-structuring the telecommunications industry in the late 1980s, to prepare the industry for the eventual opening of the market to foreign competition under the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) arrangement. The state-owned telecommunications monopoly, Telefonos de Mexico (Telmex), was privatised in 1990. The Federal Telecommunications Law was enacted in 1995 which allowed up to 49% foreign ownership in firms providing most telecommunications services. Many licences have been issued since to local and foreign players for various telecommunications services. The long distance market was liberalised in 1997 - a key milestone in Mexico. |
author2 |
Low, Valerie Chuen Chuen |
author_facet |
Low, Valerie Chuen Chuen Liew, Rosalind Pieak Yoke Ng, Tee Chiou Ngien, Timothy Hoon Chay Yam, Kum Weng |
format |
Theses and Dissertations |
author |
Liew, Rosalind Pieak Yoke Ng, Tee Chiou Ngien, Timothy Hoon Chay Yam, Kum Weng |
author_sort |
Liew, Rosalind Pieak Yoke |
title |
Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications |
title_short |
Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications |
title_full |
Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications |
title_fullStr |
Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications |
title_full_unstemmed |
Business study mission to Mexico : telecommunications |
title_sort |
business study mission to mexico : telecommunications |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/7446 |
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1789482885203361792 |