The move suggested by telcos, if executed, will bring in additional revenues of Rs 22,077 crore from Bharti Airtel, Vodafone Idea, and the Tatas in this fiscal year.
BS
: Leading telcos are discussing a proposal with the Department of
Telecommunications (DoT) regarding paying part of their AGR
dues upfront by March 31 if the Supreme Court gives a favourable
verdict on their “modification petition”, which will be heard
this week.
The
companies have offered to pay upfront the principal amount due for
licence fees and spectrum usage charges (SUCs) on the basis of
adjusted gross revenue (AGR). This amount will not include the
interest, the penalty, and the interest on the penalty. The proposed
upfront amount will be the difference between the AGR calculations
done by the DoT
and what the telcos have paid as licence fees and SUCs over the years
based on their interpretation of AGR. The Supreme Court had in
October upheld the DoT definition of AGR, which resulted in a Rs 1.47
trillion additional payout bill for the telcos.
The
move suggested by telcos, if executed, will bring in additional
revenues of Rs 22,077 crore from Bharti Airtel, Vodafone Idea, and
the Tatas in this fiscal year.
This
is in addition to the budgeted target of Rs 50,519 crore as telecom
revenues in 2019-20.
If
all other telcos (including those that have stopped operations) were
to make the upfront payment, the government will get around Rs 34,773
crore (excluding those of Reliance Jio, which has paid Rs 195 crore).
These include Rs 23,182 crore as licence fees and Rs 11,591 crore as
SUC. The three telcos, through the new petition, have requested the
court to give them permission to discuss with the DoT the terms and
timing of the payment of the remaining dues. The upfront amount
represents around 25 per cent of their dues and is in many ways in
line with what the telcos paid as deferred spectrum. In deferred
spectrum, the upfront payment varied from 25 per cent to 30 per cent,
depending on the band in which they bought spectrum, with the rest
payable in 16 years with a two-year moratorium.
If
the same formula is implemented (where a two-year moratorium is given
just after the upfront payment), telcos will not have to pay both for
deferred spectrum (the government has allowed a moratorium recently),
totalling more than Rs 50,000 crore for the next two years, and will
have no payout on AGR either. This will give a cushion for many
players like Vodafone Idea to tide over their financial problems.
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