The then Telecom Secretary J S Deepak, who headed the Telecom Commission, on February 23 wrote to Telecom Regulatory Authority of India Chairman R S Sharma about the "serious impact" of the promotional offers on the financial health of the sector and the capability of the companies to meet their contractual commitments, including payment of instalments for spectrum purchased, and repayment of loans.
Days after writing the letter, which found way into the media, Deepak left for Barcelona to attend the Mobile World Congress (MWC). And while he was in Barcelona, the government issued an order appointing him India's permanent representative to the World Trade Organisation with effect from June 1, 2017 but asked him to immediately move as OSD in the Commerce Ministry.
In the May-June 2010 auctions, Infotel Broadband Services Pvt Ltd had outbid incumbents Airtel, Vodafone and Idea to bag all-India BWA (broadband wireless access) spectrum. The firm was within hours of it winning the spectrum was acquired by Reliance. It was later allowed to use the spectrum allocated for broadband for mobile voice calling services as well.
In the recent letter, Deepak reflected TC's concerns over downward trend in government revenue because of "a tariff war in the industry triggered by free promotional offers."
Also Read
The Telecom Commission has raised a red flag on the "serious" implications of the situation on the financial health of the telecom sector, its revenue growth prospects and the wider ramification for the banking and financial sector, that has Rs 4.60 lakh crore debt exposure to telecom industry.
The Telecom Commission's recent meeting noted that licence fee collections for the current fiscal have been showing "alarming" downward trend on a quarter to quarter basis.
"These collections have fallen from Rs 3,975 crore in Q1 to Rs 3,584 crore in Q2 to Rs 3,186 crore in Q3. It is expected that this revenue will further decline in Q4 by about 8-10 per cent. The annual spectrum usage charge revenues are also likely to face a similar decline," said the letter.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content