New Delhi: A meeting of the Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi Wednesday approved sweeping changes in the policies that govern the telecom sector in the country. The decisions include opening the sector for hundred percent foreign direct investment under the automatic route, amending the formula that governs the sharing of the revenue with the government, offering a four-year moratorium for the payment of dues to the government, and extending the licence period to 30 years with the option to surrender the spectrum after 10 years, among other things.
India's telecom sector, which is the second-largest in the world with more than 1.1 billion wireless and fixed-line subscribers, was grappling with several issues that included low realisation of revenue per user due to cutthroat competition in the industry, burden of sharing revenue with the government under the licence conditions, and huge unpaid liabilities towards the government under the earlier revenue sharing formula.
Telecom minister Ashwini Vaishnav said these structural and procedural reforms will boost employment and growth of the telecom sector, address the liquidity situation of telecom companies, reduce the regulatory burden, usher in competition and protect consumer's interest.
Vaishnav said the telecom sector performed well during the Covid-19 global pandemic that saw a large number of workforce shifting to work-from-home and online education mode due to lockdowns which was possible due to a robust telecom and broadband connectivity in the country.
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The reforms approved by the Cabinet include nine structural reforms and five procedural reforms.
The minister said these reforms, including changing the formula for calculating the adjusted gross revenue (AGR) and other reliefs given to the telecom sector were revenue-neutral in nature.
The major structural reforms to overhaul the sector include rationalisation of the adjusted gross revenue (AGR), a controversial subject in the sector, as non-telecom revenue of telecom companies will be excluded from the AGR on a prospective basis.
New formula for calculating revenue sharing with government
Another pain point for telecom companies, the requirement to furnish bank guarantees under the licence conditions have been reduced by up to 80% and the government has also done away with the requirement for furnishing multiple bank guarantees as only one bank guarantee will be enough.
The government has also done away with the penalties in case of a delayed payment of licence fees and spectrum usage charges and they will only attract interest rates linked to the State Bank of India's MCLR rate. The new rate of interest on delayed payment will be 2 per cent over the SBI's MCLR, earlier it was 4% plus the MCLR. In yet another relief, there will annual compounding of interest on outstanding dues as against monthly compounding earlier.
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