People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No. 43 October 23, 2011 |
NTP
2011: Yesterday's
Scam
as Policy Today
Prabir
Purkayastha
THE
brand new National Telecom Policy 2011 (NTP 2011) proposed with
a lot of fan
fare has the same objective as earlier such policies – NTP 1994
and NTP 1999 –
how to create new scams or justify existing ones. Sibal, while
paying lip
service to various other policy objectives such as teledensity,
self-reliance,
etc., makes clear that this policy is primarily to help “.. ensuring continued
viability of (private)
service providers in a competitive environment.” Too many
licenses have been
given with not enough spectrum and not enough money for putting
in
infrastructure. Now the challenge is how to allow the existing
license holders
to either sell their licenses or provide services without
building the
necessary infrastructure.
If
NTP 1999 was to help the telecom companies to escape from the
committed license
fees running into thousands of crores of rupees to a revenue
sharing
regime, NTP 2011
game-plan appears to be
designed to help the existing licensees to escape from their
roll-out
obligations for building a network and allow them to sell their
licenses
acquired at 1/10th the market price.
In
Raja's scam, apart from his infamous first-come first-served
policy, there were
two other steps that he took. One was to change the mergers and
acquisitions
guidelines, allowing the parties to sell equity to others, the
second was
forcing BSNL to provide their infrastructure to these new
operators for providing
services through intra circle roaming. As a consequence, these
new licensees
could start getting subscribers and providing services without
rolling out
their network. That is why by making only marginal investments,
they could
still claim that they had started services, making their market
value much
higher. Without this, Unitech and Swan may not have been able to
sell their
shares to Telenor and Etisalat at 10 times what they had paid
for the license
fees.
FORCING
BSNL
INTO
LOSSES
Raja's
scam ridden Department of Telecom (DoT) regime had amended the
licenses of the
operators in June 2008 and permitted “intra circle” roaming.
What it meant was
that an operator could provide services in its service area even
though it had
not rolled out its network. Earlier, roaming was always for
areas where the
operator did not have a license and therefore his subscriber was
forced to
“roam” on a network provided by others. Along with these
modifications, Raja
also forced BSNL to provide such roaming facilities to companies
who had
received licenses in January 2008 so that they could start
providing services,
virtually without any further capital investments.
TRAI
had objected to DoT's amendment of the licenses on various
counts. The chairman
of TRAI had written in July, 2008 pointing out that as per the
TRAI Act, such
an amendment to the license could have been issued only after
seeking
recommendations from TRAI. He had also pointed out that:
(i) Such intra-circle
roaming should not be considered as a
substitute for roll-out obligations specified in the license
(ii) It distorts
various spectrum issues including quality
of service, imbalance
in spectrum
utilisation
(iii) Has implications
for additional spectrum entitlements
(v) It
has security issues with subscribers not being easy to track as
they could
shift in and out of two networks continuously
One
of the reasons that BSNL from being a company having huge
reserves to one that
today is making losses is that it has been used by the
government to allow its
competitors to piggy-back on BSNL.
In
3G services, some of the telecom majors – Vodafone, Airtel and
IDEA -- have now
extended intra-circle roaming to
provide services in areas where they do not even have licenses. Step by step we have
reached a regime where
companies are now providing services without infrastructure or
even licenses.
LEGALISING
VIOLATIONS
If
we look at the current bunch of license holders, particularly
the ones who are
party to Raja's 2G scam, TRAI is on record that their licenses
should be
cancelled as they have all reneged on the roll-out obligations.
DoT has been
dragging its feet over this. Some notices have been issued and
noises are being
made. But the intent is clear – how to allow such parties to
sell their
licenses rather than cancelling them.
The
Draft NTP 2011 is the policy framework designed to make all such
violations
legal. In any case, this has been UPA policy in telecom. When
companies such as
Vodafone violated the 49 per cent FDI cap, the then finance
minister P
Chidambaram increased the cap to 74 per cent, arguing that since
the cap is
being violated, there is no point in having the cap. Now Kapil
Sibal seems to
be following in his foot-steps.
The
key pronouncement in Draft NTP 2011 is the separation of
physical
infrastructure from services. What it means is that the network
– cables,
towers, cells etc. – can belong to one party while the other
party provides
services – a kind of providing the roads while other drive the
cars.
Theoretically,
separation of physical infrastructure from services is feasible.
However, it
brings a host of new issues – both technological as well as
legal. The problem
here is that if it is considered feasible to separate services
from
infrastructure, should we not then consider building a common
infrastructure very
much in the way that highways are? Without a common physical
infrastructure,
what would be the purpose of this separation?
The
Draft NTP 2011 appears to view that the existing infrastructure
can be
separated – Vodafone's physical infrastructural will become one
company while
its services become another one. If fragmentation of the market
is the problem
and consolidation is the goal, then it appears such a separation
will only
fragment the market even further.
As
it happens with all UPA policy, the explanation of the policy is
not what is
stated in the policy document. The target appears to be the huge
cable network
that BSNL owns. If this can be separated from BSNL, then it can
become the
common infrastructure of a number of private companies who can
provide services
without building any infrastructure. We are back to where we
started from – the
entire thrust of the policy is how to help existing license
holders provide
services without investing money. No capital expenditure, no
roll-out of
network, mint money by acquiring subscribers without pain and
then sell
licenses. This is what Sibal's policy claims as “exit” policy
for companies.
Draft
NTP 2011 has some lip service about indigenous manufacture. In
concrete terms,
all that it promises is that if everything is equal, then
domestic manufacture
will have a preference. Unfortunately, the issue in domestic
manufacture is not
about final prices of equipment but about the current excise and
customs
regime, basic infrastructure for manufacture and a host of other
issues. If we
want to promote manufacture, the only way to do so is to look at
the gamut of
issues and not make a token gesture of a kind that has no value.
CONSPIRACY
TO
DESTROY
BSNL
Currently,
the excise and customs regime is one where importing handsets
and equipment
enjoys duty preference. We have an inverted duty structure where
raw materials
and intermediate goods have a higher duty than finished goods.
What it means is
that it is cheaper to manufacture in
Without
indigenous technology, the current telecom regime is making
buying telecom
equipment impossible for BSNL and MTNL. DoT insists that all
suppliers of
equipment must also give source code which no international
supplier is willing
to give. The only exception are Chinese equipment suppliers. And
here is the
catch – the home ministry is now insisting that for security
reasons BSNL
should not buy Chinese equipment. If we take both the ministries
together and
look at the domestic manufacturing scenario, it makes sense if
we only see the
ministries working as a tag team to destroy BSNL. Are we to
believe that the
ministers are all naïve about the telecom sector, specially when
the two
concerned ministers have been deeply involved in telecom
litigation in the past
on behalf of the major telecom players? Or is there some other
interest in
sabotaging BSNL and MTNL by denying them expansion?
The
telecom policies in this country have more to do with telecom
scams than a
clear enunciation of the country’s requirements. The 1994
National Telecom
Policy lead to Sukhram and his case by case policy, and
discovery of suitcases
with crores of rupees in his bedroom. The 1999 policy was
wholesale escape for
companies who had secured licenses from paying license fees. The
current NTP
2011 policy is to help companies who have secured licenses at
throw away prices
to sell them at huge profits. A scam today is the policy
tomorrow: this appears
to be the brief of successive ministers in the telecom sector.