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| The problem with the TRAI recommendations, however, is that they restrict the number who can play in the arena, since only the existing telecom firms can bid for the 3G spectrum. If, to use a name, Vodafone wants to enter the market for mobile telephony in India, it will first have to buy a Universal Access Service Licence (UASL) for Rs 1,633 crore, and only then bid for the 3G spectrum. So the prospect of new players coming in has been restricted from the very beginning""and this is assuming that Vodafone will be given a UASL licence. This is where the department of telecommunications (DoT) comes in. What the DoT needs to do is to separate the UASL licence from the spectrum bids. Anyone who wants a UASL licence should get it automatically, with no obligation on the government's part to provide spectrum. This is what TRAI had recommended over a year ago, but there has been no follow-up action. Only when this recommendation is accepted and implemented, and more players bid for spectrum, will there be bidding that uncovers true value. There is no reason why the country's telecom future has to be confined to the existing oligopoly; if nothing else, the threat of new entrants will change the conduct of today's players, and perhaps also drive up 3G auction prices. |
| It is also not clear why TRAI has brought in rollout obligations for 3G services. While the avowed aim is to increase the penetration of telecom services in the country, such conditions were tried in the mid-1990s for fixed lines and failed, and finally the government had to waive the conditions. It must be hoped that the DoT will not repeat the mistake. |
First Published: Sep 29 2006 | 12:00 AM IST