Telcos have reduced their tariffs so much that they earn only Rs 75 per user per month, nationally.
From
the first week of December, Airtel
and Vodafone-Idea are expected to raise their tariffs, and users will
need to pay more. But is the tariff hike necessary? Telecom companies
don’t have too many options.
Almost
every Indian has a mobile phone now, though all do not use data. This
has resulted in an explosion in data consumption. An average Indian
now uses 10 GB data per month.
This
is a direct result of the price war between Reliance Jio and the two
incumbents.
Telcos reduced their tariffs so much that they earn only
Rs 75 per user per month, nationally and across the industry , for
all the data that we use: From streaming YouTube videos and video
calls over WhatsApp. Leading telcos quote their ARPU above Rs 100,
owing to their own calculations.
Mobile
data has become so affordable that an average Indian pays only 0.6
per cent of his/her monthly income on it . But things have been tough
for telecom companies: They ended up paying Rs 1 trillion over five
years on spectrum charges and licence fees. This does not include
what Airtel and Voda-Idea
need to pay as dues.
Further,
for better quality data and voice calls, they need to invest in more
towers. India has one tower for nearly 3,000 people, worse than most
Asian peers
Tariff
hike, however, may not pinch consumers much. A 15 per cent hike would
require consumers to pay nearly Rs 15 more per month, but would make
company finances more sustainable
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