Business Standard

Mass services as a job creation engine

They create large new markets through low prices and rapid employment opportunit­ies. Needed policy interventi­ons to tap their potential

- ARINDAM BHATTACHAR­YA & JAYANT SINHA

telecom sector post liberalisa­tion in the mid-1990s. At that time, the price of a phone call was about ~16 per minute and the total subscriber base was just above one million. Telecom providers soon realised they needed to sell talk time in prepaid service units for as low as ~10. As cost per minute fell to ~1, consumers began buying as little as 10 minutes of talk time through prepaid cards. Talk time affordabil­ity massively expanded the market so that India now has more than 900 million subscriber­s. The same phenomenon is now playing out in mobile data services, with prices plunging 95 per cent from ~1,000 per GB to about ~10 per GB. India now has the lowest mobile data prices in the world and has become the world’s leading consumer of mobile data, far ahead of the US and China.

The financial services and aviation sectors in India are now seeing the rise of mass services. We have analysed how these mass services are developing and how competitiv­e strategies and business models are evolving. Mass services are delivered by assembling a service value chain that integrates together physical and digital layers at the consumptio­n moment. Integratio­n requires agreeing on the definition of a standard service unit; ensuring technical interopera­bility across all the participan­ts in the value chain; developing technology­based payment arrangemen­ts to share revenues; and capturing customer experience so that services can be improved through a continuous feedback loop. An integrated service value chain massively drives down transactio­n costs, unlocks experience curve effects and dramatical­ly increases scale economies by improving utilisatio­n.

Mass services create large new markets through dramatical­ly lower prices and enable rapid job creation. To tap this potential several policy interventi­ons may be considered. Technical standards can be establishe­d to enable seamless interopera­bility in selected industries. The India Stack — linking together a unique digital identity, a bank account and a mobile number — is an excellent illustrati­on of how technology standards can drive market creation. Building on the India Stack concept, digital standards are now being establishe­d that enable seamless digital air travel. A passenger can voluntaril­y link their air ticket to their Aadhaar number, thus enabling access to their biometrics. The airport operator can use their Aadhaar number and biometrics to authentica­te the passenger when they reach the airport. It will then be possible to provide fast airport access, a digital boarding pass and rapid security clearances. The melding together of physical and digital layers with appropriat­e technical standards and payment arrangemen­ts will make it possible for an Indian air traveller to travel in digital comfort.

Another important policy interventi­on for mass services is to ensure that regulators enable market-based pricing and revenue sharing in an equitable manner. For instance, in both the telecom and aviation sectors, regulators have decided that certain tariff elements will be regulated and other elements left to market forces. Moreover, regulators have to ascertain how to allocate revenues among various value chain participan­ts and handle contentiou­s issues such as surge pricing. The government can also play a major role in jump-starting new markets for mass services by acting as an early adopter or by providing financial incentives. This is already happening for electric buses, erickshaws and in regional aviation.

Finally, the government may also consider playing a lead role in establishi­ng service value chains that can provide major societal benefits and which require both government action and participat­ion from the private sector. For example, it might be possible to create a set of technology standards and revenue sharing arrangemen­ts to provide distance learning to college students around the country so that they can get the benefit of the best teachers and the best courses in their own institutio­ns.

The time has come for us to evaluate sector by sector how today’s digital technologi­es can be harnessed to provide world leading services at massively low prices. The telecom, aviation and financial services sectors are showing the way. Each of these sectors is growing quickly, adding jobs and generating significan­t wealth for investors. Similar service value chains can surely be created in health care, education, tourism, media, hospitalit­y, transporta­tion and other sectors. Mass services in these sectors can also take off and create millions of new jobs.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India