"As a policy maker, I think the tariffs should hold. I am not the operator, nor I am the regulator, but I am saying that there are two elements here and these elements will actually act together to restrain any increase in tariffs," Telecom Secretary MF Farooqui said at the Mobile World Congress here.
He said on the one hand, competition will restrain operators from increasing tariffs and on the other, new technology would allow them to lower costs and offer a wider range of services.
Eight telecom companies, including Bharti Airtel, Vodafone and Idea Cellular, the biggest three in the country, bid a combined Rs 61,162 crore in the spectrum auction held earlier this month. The government offered airwaves in the 1800 MHz and 900 MHz bands.
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"We have had declining tariffs for 18 years; this cannot be sustained forever. We believe the point has come where we will have to increase our tariffs every year, depending on cost levels," Vodafone India Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Marten Pieters said recently.
Pieters said the industry has not yet recovered from the excesses of the 2010 auction and the February auction, combined with others expected in the next couple of years, will worsen the industry's health.
"Let's not forget that we are not asking for down-payment," he said. Operators can make part-payment now and the rest over a period of time, he said.
Winners of spectrum can make a partial upfront payment by March 3 and pay the rest in 10 yearly installments. If the bidders opt for deferred payments, the government will get about Rs 18,296 crore in this financial year.