CorporateTrai asks DoT to refer uniform licence fee to regulator
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has urged the government to consult it before deciding on a uniform license fee for operators, saying it has implications on the Centre’s revenue, as well as on service providers.
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The Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has decided that the existing variable licence fee structure for telecom operators should be replaced with a uniform one. A departmental note suggests a uniform licence fee of 8.5 per cent for all types of services.
In a letter to DoT on Friday, Trai said the proposed change in the license fee would affect both the government revenue and the operators’ businesses, which, in turn, would hit the subscribers.
Trai said the views of all stakeholders must be taken into consideration before arriving at the new figure.
A DoT official said minister A Raja would take a call if the matter was referred to Trai. But DoT feels the Telecom Commission, the policy-making wing of DoT, should take the final call on this.
If the matter is referred to Trai, it is going to be a long haul as DoT may insist on a time-bound response while Trai would like to do it through the usual consultation and recommendation process.
The uniform licence fee is mooted to help avoid arbitrage over integrated operators, allegedly loading up maximum revenues on licences with lower fee.
A change in the licence fee structure, an analyst said, would have an adverse effect on long-distance operators and internet service providers who pay only 6 per cent of their annual revenues as licence fee.
It will also have a negative impact on mobile operators offering services in C Circle states like Assam, Bihar and Orissa, as they are paying only 6 per cent. An additional 2.5 percentage point outgo could weigh heavily on their top lines.
Mobile operators in metro regions and Circle A states will, however, gain, since they currently pay a 10 per cent licence fee.
For the government, this will have a positive impact, as it plugs the loophole in the current system where the operators were giving wrong financial reports.
At present, operators pay between 6 per cent and 10 per cent of their annual revenue to the government as licence fee, depending on the type of service. This allows operators with multiple licences to take advantage of the differential fees and show higher revenues under the licence with lower revenue share.
The government has recently ordered a third-party audit into the accounts of all integrated telecom companies, as some of these were found to be under-reporting revenues in segments attracting revenue share.