Free broadband to all Indians?

The government of India is considering a radical scheme under which it will provide free broadband and landline phone service to all Indians, paid for by billions of dollars in telecom taxes now just sitting idle in the bank.
The free broadband would be at 2 Mb/s.
In India, as elsewhere around the world, the phone companies have been reporting declining numbers of landline subscribers. The free service could start rolling out as quickly as 2009. Government owned Indian phone companies Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited (MTNL) would provide the free service. Those two companies already provide the vast majority of all of Indian broadband. By the end of this year they are expected to account for 7 million out of 9 million DSL lines in the country, according to Indian government plans, which call for a massive xDSL rollout this year. There were only 2.3 million CSL lines in the country at the end of last year, of which BSNL accounted for almost half.
With landline service - for those who still want it - and broadband free, India's phone companies would be expected to look to various unspecified value-added services for their revenue, according to the government plan. "The move holds the potential to kill the telecom business as we know it," said the Indiatimes.
Funding the plan, and paying for a nationwide fiber optic network to be built and run by Department of Telecom (DoT), will be India's Universal Service Obligation Fund (USOF) into which all telecom operators in India cough up 5 percent of their annual revenues. Estimates are that as of the end of March the USOF stood at over $2.2 billion, of which only part would be needed to pay for the plan.

No comments:

Search your favourite topic

3G (23) 4G (10) africa broadband (2) African Telecom (3) Aircell (4) airtel (20) Android (4) Apple (6) Asia Pacific Telecom market (8) bharti (7) broadband (39) Broadcasting (1) BSNL (10) CDMA (10) china mobile (37) China Telecom Market (13) cross media ownership (1) digital divide (3) DoCoMo (3) DoT (3) DTH (1) EDGE (2) Enterprise Telecom Business (5) ericsson (4) etisalat (1) European Telecom market (9) EVDO (1) FCC (2) fixed line market (1) fixed mobile convergence (2) forecasts for mobile market (5) GTL (1) HSPA (7) Huawei (2) idea (10) India 3G (47) India CDMA (50) India GSM (60) India Mobile (48) infrastructure sharing (6) International Long Distance (3) Internet service providers (3) Intra Circle Roaming (1) Ipad (1) IPTV (5) ITU (1) largetst telecom operator (6) latest telecom news (54) LG (2) LTE (10) M-commerce (4) Managed networks (2) Maxis (3) Middle Eastern telecom market (6) MIMO (1) mobile (21) mobile advertising (2) Mobile banking (5) mobile handsets (14) Motorola (3) MTNL (3) MVNO (2) Next Generation Networks (1) nokia (7) Nokia Siemens (1) number portability (6) OFDMA (1) QUALCOMM (1) Reliance Communications (16) RIM (2) Rural broadband (1) rural mobile infrastructure (9) Russia (1) Samsung (4) satellite communications (1) Smart Pad (1) Smartphone (3) Sony Ericsson (2) South East Asian Market (3) Spectrum (9) Spice (1) strategy for mobile operators (63) Symbian (1) Tablet (3) Tariff (1) Tata Communications (2) Tata Teleservices (5) TD-SCDMA (2) Telcordia (1) Tele-density (4) telecom equipment (22) Telecom growth projections (13) Telecom Market India (57) telecom market share (17) telecom operator strategy (40) telecom policy (32) Telecom regulation (7) telecom sector india (31) TRAI (13) Unique Identification Authority of India (1) US Telecom market (11) USO fund (4) VAS (2) verizon (6) Virgin (1) Vodafone (1) vodafone india (11) VoIP (5) VSNL (2) WAN (1) WCDMA (4) WiBro (1) WiFI (13) WiMAX (20) wireless broadband (43) wireless US (12) WMAN (1) Yota (1) Zain (1) ZTE (2)