Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Cheap spectrum, low tax may help untangle mess in telecom

- Dhirendra Tripathi dhirendra.t@livemint.com ■

STAKEHOLDE­RS ARE WORRIED ABOUT THE IMPACT THE CURRENT CRISIS COULD HAVE ON THE PROPOSED AUCTION OF 5G SPECTRUM

NEWDELHI: India’s telecom sector needs a fresh impetus, ranging from cutting the plethora of levies the sector is burdened with, to lowering the reserve price for spectrum in forthcomin­g auctions, according to experts.

“Rather than taxing the performanc­e of the operators at a fixed rate in perpetuity, the government should look at a variable rate which would leave more investible surplus in the hands of the operators. This will cut borrowings, save interest costs, resulting in some sort of revenueneu­tral rate which could be indexed to inflation with another 1% for exigencies,” said BK Syngal, senior principal at Delhibased Dua Consulting.

The government has generated lower revenue from telecom in each of the past three years. It got a total of ₹12,100 crore as licence fee and spectrum charges in the year ended March 31, a 13% decline from ₹13,700 crore it received in the previous year.

Telecom services currently attract a goods and services tax of 18%. Companies also pay a licence fee of 8% and spectrum user charges of 3-5%, besides paying corporate tax.

To tide over the immediate crisis, Syngal suggests waiving interest charges from the ₹92,000 crore in dues that the Supreme Court has directed telecom companies to pay in the adjusted gross revenue (AGR) case two weeks ago. Syngal said companies should be allowed to pay only the principal amount.

Jaideep Ghosh, partner at KPMG, suggests that telecom companies should be allowed to make the payments later.

Industry stakeholde­rs are also worried about the impact the current crisis could have on the proposed auction of 5G spectrum. The companies are already burdened with massive debt. At the end of March 2019, Bharti Airtel had a net debt of ₹1.08 lakh crore. The company’s annualised FY20 revenue is seen 22.5% lower from FY16. Vodafone Idea is expected to fare worse, with revenue likely to decline by 43.4% during the same period.

“5G isn’t an extension of 4G. It’s a different ecosystem altogether. China has already raced ahead in 5G. The government could look at incentivis­ing users. This will help its Digital India goals as well as improve the health of the companies,” said Harsh Gupta, chief investment officer at Ashika Group, a financial services firm. Gupta suggests a monthly ₹30 ‘Digital Literacy Voucher’ for every mobile user for a year. “You have JAM (Jan Dhan-aadhar-mobile) in place. Every mobile user could be given `30 as a monthly recharge with any telecom service provider. That will improve the ARPUS too,” he said. ARPUS in India are currently the lowest in the world, ranging between ₹110 and ₹130 per month for the companies.

The industry has for long complained before successive government­s, short of options to raise revenues to finance their social welfare schemes, using it as a cash cow to make up for its deficits. Their grouse has been that government­s haven’t looked at the sector in a holistic manner.

“Many of the problems would be solved if it looked at it holistical­ly and not just as a telecom services provider. All telecom operators are now enablers of digital literacy in some way. They are content providers. What impacts telecom companies also impacts network element providers, logistics providers, tower companies and so on,” KPMG’S Ghosh said. He is also not against the idea of deferring the spectrum auction but cautions it shouldn’t be for too long. Ghosh said the auction could be deferred by a few months but added a caveat: “China has moved ahead in 5G. It would not be prudent to delay it for too long,” he said.

Syngal favours redefining the concept of AGR which currently also includes dividend income, interest and revenues from sale of handsets bundled with services. “The definition leaves a lot of grey area on what comprises telecom services. A revenue neutral mechanism will eliminate the ambiguity,” he said.

Mint series deep dives into the telecom sector as it lurches from crisis to crisis.

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