Millennium Post

TELECOM SECTOR TAXED JUST LIKE TOBACCO INDUSTRY: SUNIL MITTAL

-

NEW DELHI: Telecom czar Sunil Bharti Mittal Thursday said consolidat­ion in Indian telecom sector has come about at "significan­t pain" of nearly $50 billion of investment writeoff and job losses, and went on to flag high taxes that the sector faces.

Speaking at the inaugural session of India Mobile Congress 2018, Mittal who is the Chairman of telecom major Bharti Airtel, rued that the telecom sector remains highly taxed just like the tobacco industry, when it is contributi­ng to India's digital aspiration­s.

"In India, for every Rs 190 that mobile operators earn, nearly Rs 37 goes towards one form of levy or the other. I cannot see how this contradict­ion can exist...where on one hand we have PM'S vision of digitally enabled India ...which requires tremendous amount of investment, on the other hand we keep the spectrum prices and our licence fee very high...and of course the GST is at 18 per cent which almost at the highest tax bracket," Mittal said.

This needs to be resolved, Mittal said, adding he is happy that the National Digital Communicat­ions Policy (NDCP) captures the outstandin­g issues like doing away of dual taxation, accelerati­ng Merger and acquisitio­n process, and reducing litigation in the sector.

He also said the industry has now reached the "right structure" but noted that the consolidat­ion of the Indian telecom market did not take place in an orderly manner except in case of Vodafone Idea merger.

"Many operators had to go through significan­t amount of pain and job losses, nearly 50 billion dollars has been written off and now we have arrived to a point where we are in the right industry structure," Mittal said.

He said telecom markets globally are moving towards having 2-3 operators and added that in India, too, consolidat­ion had paved the way for three private players and one state operator to cover over 1.2 billion people.

"As all of you are aware, the mobile industry is a heavy capital intensive industry, which requires continuous change of technology, requires laying of fibres, putting towers, so that we can reach the customer," he said.

Mittal said that the National Digital Communicat­ions Policy, like the previous telecom policy, clearly acknowledg­es that revenue maximisati­on is not the objective.

"There is an overarchin­g objective of the earlier national telecom policy and now also enshrined in the NDCP that revenue maximisati­on is not the objective. Then the question is why the industry and Department of Telecom are in hundreds of litigation­s around only one objective of revenue maximisati­on," Mittal said.

The industry is gearing up for 5G roll out and will "deliver" results just as it has over the last 24 years, Mittal said, but added that spectrum prices and charges need to be reasonable and affordable, and incidence of high taxation needs to be addressed.

It is pertinent to mention that establishe­d operators like Bharti Airtel, Vodafone Idea Ltd are in the midst of a bruising tariff war following the entry of Reliance Jio, backed by India's richest businessma­n Mukesh Ambani. Jio's free voice and dirt-cheap data offering have dented the financial metrics of incumbent operators, deepening the impact of regulatory decisions like cut in terminatio­n charges, even though the market is growing at a scorching pace.

Mittal said that over the last one year India has embraced technology with both hands.

"Today, we have over 450 million mobile net users and are increasing­ly adding millions of them almost on weekly basis," he pointed out.

In India, for every `190 that mobile operators earn, nearly `37 goes towards one form of levy or the other. I cannot see how this contradict­ion can exist... where on one hand we have PM’S vision of digitally enabled India... which requires tremendous amount of investment

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India