Reference Text
Time Left10:00
For
a
country
whose
telecommunications
ministers
worry
about
being
labelled
'call
drop'
ministers,
the
recent
auction
of
2350
megahertz
of
telecom
spectrum
was
disappointing.
Only
seven
out
of
11
telecom
players
in
India
participated,
and
there
were
takers
for
just
around
40
per
cent
of
the
prized
radio
frequency
band
on
offer.
In
fact,
four
operators
will
fork
out
90
per
cent
of
the
Centre’s
receipts
from
this
auction,
around
Rs.66,000
crore,
half
of
which
will
accrue
to
the
exchequer
this
fiscal.
That
translates
into
a
43
per
cent
shortfall
from
the
Budget
estimates
from
spectrum
sales
for
this
year,
though
Finance
Minister
Arun
Jaitley
has
pointed
out
that
the
inflows
from
the
black
money
amnesty
scheme
would
help
the
Centre
balance
its
books.
The
official
argument
is
that
the
poor
response
is
a
function
of
the
high
indebtedness
(nearly
Rs.400,000
crore
at
last
count)
of
India’s
telcos;
the
latter
could,
in
turn,
cite
the
high
base
price
set
by
the
government,
pegging
the
potential
value
of
the
spectrum
at
Rs.560,000
crore.
Any
operator
looking
to
build
a
national
network
using
the
most
efficient
spectrum
on
offer
in
the
700
MHz
band
would
need
over
Rs.
57,000
crore.
Not
surprisingly,
not
a
single
player
evinced
interest
in
this
band
In
fact,
it
has
been
a
suboptimal
outcome
from
the
perspective
of
every
single
stakeholder.
India’s
telecom
success
story
has
been
integral
to
the
country’s
growth
story
in
recent
years,
demonstrating
to
the
world
its
ability
to
tap
and
grow
the
domestic
market
quickly
as
well
as
establish
a
global
footprint.
But
a
billion
consumers,
endless
minutes
of
talk-time
a
day
and
low
tariffs
are
not
enough
if
the
quality
of
service
on
offer
is
deteriorating,
both
in
data
and
voice.
In
many
areas,
networks
that
should
operate
at
65
per
cent
capacity
are
working
at
95
per
cent
due
to
high
congestion,
leading
to
poor
voice
services,
as
the
telecom
regulator,
R.S.
Sharma,
noted
recently.
Despite
the
new
spectrum
with
telcos,
the
sheer
volume
of
voice
traffic
means
that
improvements
in
quality
may
be
marginal.
Similar
issues
plague
data
traffic.
The
focus
of
the
existing
telcos’
strategy
for
this
auction
has
been
to
acquire
enough
spectrum
to
bolster
4G
data
services
in
urban
markets,
where
they
expect
tough
competition
from
the
new
player,
Reliance
Jio.
This
could
have
a
bearing
on
the
quality
of
connectivity
and
the
reach
of
several
of
the
government’s
ambitious
programmes,
from
Digital
India
to
direct
benefit
transfer.
The
government
needs
to
learn
from
this
episode
and
free
the
bureaucracy
from
the
fear
of
the
auditor
and
the
investigator
soon,
for
better
outcomes
in
all
its
plans.
For
a
country
whose
telecommunications
ministers
worry
about
being