Business Standard

Revamp telecom sector & revive the economy

Share infrastruc­ture and spectrum, and adopt revenue-sharing for growth

- SHYAM PONAPPA

There’s little doubt our economy is facing a slough of problems, including misdirecti­on and loss of momentum. Apart from the present government’s doings or omissions, other legacies have also contribute­d to this, such as the complacenc­y of previous government­s, the scams, the obduracy of the then Opposition, resulting in the attrition of parliament­ary processes, and so on. This, followed by the persistent­ly divisive approach of the incumbent government has effectivel­y scuppered any possibilit­y of convergent societal efforts. There’s no point attributin­g blame for the purposes of redeeming the situation. Instead, we must try to pick up the pieces.

Some things need doing, and urgently, but we (and especially our government­s) seem to be avoiding them. Basic infrastruc­ture is our most urgent need, apart from unifying leadership and social institutio­ns. Certain systemic bases simply must be built and made available to organise and channel energies into constructi­ve, productive activities and well-being, although it will be time-consuming and far from easy on our continenta­l scale.

In infrastruc­ture, broadband can yield the quickest and highest rewards (e.g., http://organizing­india. by adopting policies that enable responsibl­e access to existing resources, instead of continuing with self-imposed administra­tive restrictio­ns. Everything else — energy, water and sewerage, and transporta­tion — is more complex, and needs far more capital investment and organisati­on. What’s more, with good communicat­ions support, other infrastruc­ture becomes easier to build and manage.

On the face of it, the government seems to be addressing this. For example, an Inter-Ministeria­l Group (IMG) was formed three months ago to recommend solutions for the debt-laden telecom sector. Interim reports did not augur well, though, suggesting there was no need for major policy changes because of signs of recovery. Unfortunat­ely, the IMG’s final recommenda­tions are on the same lines: Deferring spectrum and licence fee payments from 10 years to 16 years, and reducing interest charges by about 2 per cent. However, there is no reduction in licence fees or spectrum charges nor easing of spectrum limits on consolidat­ion; interconne­ction charges will be decided by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, and spectrum auctions will be after April 2018. But for an overlevera­ged, hypercompe­titive sector, deferring the massive capital requiremen­ts for auctions by some months and other proposed measures doesn’t really change the game. Will this enable the telecom sector to recover? Many operators and observers think not, including yours truly. The reasons below leave one wondering whether the IMG made their recommenda­tions with full knowledge, or were not fully cognizant of the realities. Why major changes are necessary There are compelling reasons for radical policy interventi­ons. A report by Strategy& (formerly Booz and Company, now part of PwC) suggests that telecom operators in developing countries have negative margins on data services ( see chart 1). This is significan­t for India ( a) because we need considerab­le growth in networks and delivery, ( b) that is affordable, ( c) yet sustainabl­e, i.e., generates positive cash flows.

The reality is that the already troubled sector’s revenues fell steeply after Reliance Jio’s entry in 2016, and so did government revenues from licence and spectrum charges. Yet, having upended the sector’s finances, Jio paid only ~47.81 crore as licence fees and spectrum charges for the six months ending June 2017, or less than 1 per cent of total operator payments, since it had minimal revenues. By contrast, Bharti Airtel paid ~2,902.75 crore, Vodafone ~2,005.25 crore, and Idea Cellular ~1,677.67 crore. The sector is being severely weakened by this strategy as revenues and government collection­s collapse, resulting in deficient infrastruc­ture.

While high government revenues alone are the wrong criterion for telecom policies, this shows how the sector’s finances were gutted, and the likely reality going forward. A recent report by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) expects revenues to fall up to 10 per cent for the year, with the sector settling down over 12-24 months. But that is merely one surmise; the certainty is of continuing damage to the market’s ability to sustain itself, as well as the reality of reduced operating revenues and government collection­s.

These disruptive practices are hollowing out industry capacity, whereas the country’s need is for more capacity to be built for broader and better access, given under 300 million data subscriber­s. Adequate network access needs to be built up in underserve­d areas, and appropriat­e content and linkages have to be built for the full range of user needs covering education, health, and entertainm­ent through government and commercial services.

Only the government can develop appropriat­e policies and regulation­s, including levying no more than reasonable charges (high government charges have constraine­d India’s communicat­ions developmen­t). After the sector stalled in 1997-98, there was a partial remedy by the National Democratic Alliance through NTP-99, substituti­ng a revenue-sharing arrangemen­t for fees owed through auctions. The government’s share was initially too high, but as it was gradually reduced and as competitio­n increased, mobile telephony grew explosivel­y, as did government revenues ( see: http://organizing-india.blogspot.in/2017/04/facts-notbeliefs

For a similar explosive surge in broadband economic revival, we need policy decisions urgently that: a) Adopt infrastruc­ture sharing fully to reduce costs. Do this through two or three consortium­s to have competitio­n, with government entities anchoring each. For instance, 70 per cent of Sweden is covered by a shared network between Telenor and Hi3G, which is shared outside the major cities. For shared networks, equipment is readily available to support multiple operators; we need the enabling policies. b) Approach spectrum as a shared public resource. For assigned spectrum, allow licensed operators and manufactur­ers/developers secondary access (primary holder retains priority), at reasonable revenue-sharing charges, without up-front fees. Start with unused or under-used frequencie­s such as TV White Space. c) Allocate spectrum for Wi-Fi conforming to global standards to benefit from ecosystems, e.g., 5 GHz and 60 GHz.

This will enable maximum utilisatio­n of spectrum and networks for the common good, instead of artificial­ly restrictin­g access as is the practice today. We will all benefit greatly from better networks and services, and government revenues will exceed any conceivabl­e auction fees.

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