Business Standard

Trai seeks feedback on proposed policy

- KIRAN RATHEE

With the government planning to come up with a new telecom policy by March, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India( Tr ai) has issued a consultati­on paper, seeking the views of all stakeholde­rs on the structure and content of the proposed policy. The National Telecom Policy 2018 would set the mission and objectives to be accomplish­ed by the endof2022, Traisaid.

With the government planning to come out with a new telecom policy by March, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has issued a consultati­on paper, seeking the views of all stakeholde­rs on the structure and contents of the proposed policy.

The National Telecom Policy (NTP) 2018 would set the mission and objectives to be accomplish­ed by the end of 2022, when India would be celebratin­g its 75 years of independen­ce, the sectoral regulator said, adding that it would also specify the strategies to accomplish such objectives.

“The NTP 2018 can have twin goals — to facilitate the developmen­t of communicat­ion infrastruc­ture and services to achieve inclusive socio-economic growth in the country, and to propel India to become the front-runner in the fourth industrial revolution,” Trai said in the consultati­on paper.

Stakeholde­rs have been asked to send their feedback “clearly outlining the specifics” along with justificat­ion. They may also suggest any other issue related to the policy framework which they feel is important

for the growth of the sector.

The Department of Telecommun­ications (DoT) had sought last year Trai’s comments regarding the formulatio­n of the policy. The objectives of the NTP 2018 include increasing rural tele-density to 100 per cent and attracting investment­s equivalent to $100 billion in the

communicat­ion sector.

The policy also aims to enable access to high-quality wireless broadband services at affordable prices for 90 per cent population and achieve 900 million broadband connection­s at a minimum download speed of 2 Mbps — of this, at least 150 million connection­s at a minimum download

speed of 20 Mbps. Besides, it intends to help India leapfrog to amongst top50 nations in internatio­nal rankings in terms of network readiness, communicat­ions systems, and services.

Other objectives of the policy include developing 10 million public Wi-Fi hotspots, attaining an average speed of 20 Mbps for wireless and 50 Mbps for wireline internet connectivi­ty, providing data connectivi­ty of at least 1 Gbps speed to all gram panchayats, and enabling access to wireline broadband services for 50 per cent households in the country.

According to the DoT, the new telecom policy will be governed by the key guiding principle of alignment with the national vision. Its major themes will be regulatory and licensing frameworks impacting the telecom sector, connectivi­ty-for-all, quality of services, ease of doing business, and absorption of new technologi­es, including 5G and IoT (internet of things). The government also wants to encourage innovation and manufactur­ing, and develop a large pool of digitally skilled man-power.

According to an Indian Council for Research on Internatio­nal Economic Relations (ICRIER) study, a 10 per cent increase in the rate of growth of broadband subscriber­s will result in a 2.4 per cent increase in the GDP rate. Internatio­nal experience also suggests that telecommun­ication services catalyse the growth of all sectors of economy, particular­ly, the fundamenta­l sectors like health, education, agricultur­e, digital services, and industry.

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