Regulatory stalemate

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| In fact, the ministry has not moved on the Trai recommendations on unified licensing, which would allow users to offer any service, telephone or TV or internet, on a single licence. No action has been taken on TRAI's recommendation to reduce tariffs for VPN services on the internet. Nor has the telecom ministry asked Trai to give its recommendations on reducing international and national long-distance tariffs (under the law, a Trai recommendation is mandatory before the ministry takes any decision), and the move to reduce the access deficit charge paid by telecom users across the country to BSNL also remains in limbo. The recommendation that, as in the rest of the world, the incumbent operator (BSNL) should be forced to allow others to use its last-mile access to provide broadband internet services, though desirable from the nation's point of view, has been rejected by the government. While many blame the current problem on the apparent personality clash between the Trai chief and the telecom minister, there can be no change unless BSNL is forced to observe regulatory discipline. And, since the Trai chief is there till March, waiting for him to go is no solution. |
First Published: Nov 08 2005 | 12:00 AM IST