The Free Press Journal

Six telcos understate­d revenues by over Rs 61,000 cr, says CAG

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Bharti Airtel, Vodafone, Idea and three other private telecom firms understate­d revenues by more than Rs 61,000 crore over five years, resulting in short payment of nearly Rs 7,700 crore in statutory dues to the government, the CAG said on Friday.

The Comptrolle­r and Auditor General of India (CAG) said another Rs 4,531.62 crore was due from the six operators as interest on the short paid revenue share. Airtel, India's largest telecom operator, Vodafone India, Idea Cellular, Reliance Communicat­ions, Aircel understate­d revenues during 2010-11 to 2014-15 period (for Sistema Shyam the period begins from 2006-07). This was done through accounting adjustment­s for commission or discount paid to their distributo­rs, promotiona­l schemes like free talk time and discounts to post-paid subscriber­s and on roaming services.

The revenue was understate­d also by netting of revenue from infrastruc­ture sharing and non-inclusion of forex gains, interest income and sale of investment, the CAG said in a report tabled in Parliament.

CAG calculated that Airtel owes to the government Rs 2,602.24 crore in licence fee and spectrum usage charge (SUC) for 2010-11 to 2014-15. It owes another Rs 1,245.91 crore in interest.

Dues from Vodafone totalled Rs 3,331.79 crore including Rs 1,178.84 crore in interest. For Idea, the statutory dues stood at Rs 1,136.29 crore plus Rs 657.88 crore in interest. Anil Ambani-led RComm owed a total of Rs 1,911.17 crore (including Rs 839.09 crore interest), Aircel Rs 1,226.65 crore and SSTL Rs 116.71 crore. As per the New Telecom Policy, telecom licensees are required to share a percentage of their Adjusted Gross Revenue (AGR) with the government as annual License Fee (LF).

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