The government has been dangling the carrot of free roaming to subscribers for a while. But Trai Chairman Rahul Khullar has said that such a regime is not possible at the moment.
What Trai has done instead is that it has reduced the 2007 cap on roaming call tariffs and offered subscribers the option to pay a monthly amount and escape roaming charges altogether.
Both the changes are cosmetic.
On outgoing calls, the tariff charged by telcos was below the 2007 cap; that cap has now been brought to the level of the tariff -- there’s no real gain to subscribers.
For incoming calls, there is some benefit because the new cap (75 paise per minute) is below the existing tariff (Rs 1 per minute).
As far as a fixed monthly rental is concerned, many telcos already have such schemes on offer.
Free roaming was being resisted by large telcos because the service fetches them as much as 10 per cent of their revenue. Bharti Airtel, Vodafone and Idea Cellular account for four-fifths of the total roaming revenue of the sector.
Free roaming, they had argued, would punch a hole of Rs 13,000 crore (Rs 130 billion) in the industry’s pocket.
The smaller telcos, which do not get more than five per cent of their revenue from roaming charges, were in favour of free roaming because they felt it would increase usage of airtime and hence improve their
Trai turns the game in big telcos' favour
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