Competition in Telecommunications is pretty much fake anyway.
We have something like 4 mobile carriers, and perhaps as many rebrandings which is no real net. They found the 3G build-out requirements tough to meet in the northern regions, because they're not as desolate as .au outback, but they're the least populated areas in entire Europe. They pooled up in 2 networks, so there is some competition.
Dark fibre is the other issue. There is a lot of fibre providers over the country; only one, the old monopoly, has some claim to reach from long-reach transmission into peoples homes, but there is enough competition that you can build a fibre network all over the country without using much of their lines.
ISP-wise, we've got like 4 large and perhaps 10 small ISP's that have presence over the country. Most of the smaller ones are local. There is aggressive concentration going on in form of buying up smaller competitors. In the large cities, you can effectively multi-home for a sensible price (or could, before IPv4 addresses ran out; now only v6 is cheap.) but on the countryside, it's harder.
Competition does exist, but the larger ones tend to try squashing it as much as possible, of course.
At work, I buy lit waves and dark fibre, and shop for IP transit, and it's reasonably healthy on the wholesale market which we're in, even if we're a end-user, because of our capacity needs; we can generate close to 0,6 Tbit peak outbound.