Skip to main content

India’s 5G leap is about powering tomorrow


The fifth generation mobile network, or 5G, is the next level of mobile network that will shape the Fourth Industrial Revolution, or Industrial 4.0, quality of service delivery, innovation, etc. by facilitating smarter and developing societies. Commercial 5G networks began to be deployed in 2020 and are expected to reach 12% of world mobile connections (1.1 billion) and generate revenues up to U.S.$1.3 trillion by 2025 for operators. The technology that 5G uses will improve data transfer speed at unexpected higher levels — almost 100 times more — and reduce latency times helping mission-critical services. Thus, 5G is essential but are we ready for it?

Some roadblocks

India’s telecom sector, which has revolutionised the digital space and facilitated services-led growth and quality of life, has been estimated to be one of the top performers globally for several years; but it has also been in doldrums for the last few years. Moreover, the Supreme Court of India’s ruling on the dues being sought by the Department of Telecommunications (estimated to be more than ₹90,000 crore has further exacerbated the financial condition of telecom companies. It is no wonder then that the number of telecom operators has come down to a handful from around 15 a few years back. In this scenario, the huge investment required for 5G may add to their worries. The trial run of 5G in developed countries such as Japan and the United States reveals that the investment is very high, ranging from $6 million per small city to $60 million per large or densely populated city.

Much potential

The new generation mobile network has the transformative potential to provide a wide range of benefits to the Indian economy, which when enhanced with artificial intelligence provides a new dimension to connected and autonomous systems. Its use is a chance for Indian policy-makers to educate and empower citizens and businesses, and transform existing cities into smart and innovative cities. This may allow citizens and communities to get socio-economic benefits and comforts delivered by a well-advanced, more data-intensive, digital economy. Broadly speaking, the uses of 5G in India may encompass enhanced outdoor and indoor broadband, the Internet of things, smart cities, smart agriculture, energy monitoring, remote monitoring, smart grids, telehealth, industrial automation, remote patient monitoring and industrial automation to name some of the areas. There is great potential for India to move to an advanced digital revolution.

However, it is imperative to undertake an independent economic assessment, city wise, beginning with the metro cities, to assess the commercial viability for 5G deployment in India. Till this happens we may continue enhancing the existing quality of 4G networks. Singapore had planned four 5G networks — two comprehensive 5G networks and two others with smaller and limited coverage, the reason being the high cost in deployment of fibre cables and the scarcity of 5G airwaves.

What needs to be done

The immediate priority for India will be in identifying end users and population to be covered, analysis of the existing network and operators, identification of cities for the 5G roll out, working out an investment model, and minimisation of the digital risk and pricing based on the externalities and usage of various sectors. The deployment of 5G in India needs to be carefully planned after a cost benefit analysis by independent experts which will create a level-playing field through market mechanism such as facilitating, simulating, auctioning, ensuring competition, functioning markets, etc.

Once a case is made for 5G, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) may consider preparing a foolproof spectrum road map with a predictable renewal process which will compensate the huge investment required for deployment and ensure coverage. A level-playing field should be created for all telecom companies with more focus on companies which have the experience of ensuring telecom networks to remote areas and the potential to provide affordable coverage. Global trial runs show that the key areas for 5G deployment are harmonisation of 5G spectrum bands, pricing and sharing of the spectrum. Sharing of available spectrum to maximise its efficient use especially in rural areas, and spectrum allocation procedures that favour investment, need to be considered.

Essential sector-friendly steps

As the deployment of 5G network is expensive, both the Central and State governments may need to consider measures which stimulate fibre investment, attract investment through public private partnerships (PPPs) and facilitate investment funds on a nominal interest basis. Fortunately, the big telecom package along with reforms announced by the Government in the middle of September bring relief and create an enabling environment for investment in the sector. Steps such as a moratorium on dues, redefining adjusted gross revenue, and reducing spectrum charges will help all telecom companies, more so Airtel and Vodafone Idea who face precarious financial situations. Further, allowing 100% foreign direct investment in the telecom sector under the automatic route along with these policy reforms augurs well for the sector to attract investment. Implementation of 5G requires huge investment and the relief package is welcome step.

Tax issues too

The Government also needs to address information asymmetry and negative externalities through laws and regulations/taxes and subsidies. The deployment of 5G technology will also need right of access to government infrastructure such as traffic lights, lamp posts, etc. where wireless operators can deploy electronic small cell apparatus. At the same time, reasonable fees may be charged by State and local governments to operators for affordable deployment of 5G equipment. Further, removing the tax burden for deploying fibre networks reduces associated costs, thereby promoting investment as was done by Singapore government, could help in the smooth deployment of fibre in India.

As India has already witnessed digital revolution even in its remotest areas due to cost-effective 4G technology, the use of 5G can play a vital role in enhancing this sector and also facilitating India’s goal to emerge as a manufacturing and innovation hub. The negative implication of 5G is furthering the ‘digital divide’. Therefore, Government policies should also focus on affordable coverage through synchronisation of bandwidth.

https://sites.google.com/view/insightsdev/home


 

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

WHAT IS THE MAIN APPEAL .........Need to move with caution

COGNITIVE SKILLS OF  ELEPHANT Elephants have been observed using such ‘learned’ skills to either cleverly cross electric fences using their non-conducting tusks or if no tusks, destroying the entire fence by hurling uprooted trees on the wire or pushing down the cemented poles to disconnect the wire. These are some testimonies suggesting how elephants perhaps may be learning to solve the conundrum based on their previous noxious experiences. . WHY  WE ARE FORGOTTEN ABOUT SOMETHING People visiting forests feel great about being in nature. They capture some memories and photographs, and write blogs about how splendid nature is. What they forget in the due course is the compromise some of the long-ranging animals must have gone through. One such animal that needs a large roaming space and seasonal connectivity to different forests are elephants. Their movements are not just motivated for foraging, but for searching for mates, suitable habitats across seasons and resources. MAN AN...

A GLIMPSE OF ONE OF THE FIRST LOVE.......

True spirit amongst aspirants TUMHE DEKHA TO LAGA KI...  ABHI ABHI MERA JANM HUA HAI, TERE AANE KI AAHAT, MERE DIL KI YE GHABRAHAT..., ROSHANI KA TUMHARE SATH AKAAR, KYA YE HAI MERE MAN KI PUKAR..., TU MUSKURAI MAI STABDH RAH GAYA, HAN MAIN BHI MUSKURAYA...... AUR  MUJHE PYAR HO GAYA.... MAIN YE SONCHATA HE RAH GAYA... ISWAR AAJ SURYODAY KE ANTIM PAHAL ME, RASTA KYUN BHOOL GAYA..... IN ENGLISH WHEN I SAW YOU I FELT THAT I WAS BORN JUST NOW, THE FEAR OF YOUR ARRIVAL, THE FEAR OF MY HEART, THE LIGHT WITH YOU, IS THIS THE CALL OF MY HEART...., YOU REMAINED STILL IN  SMILE, YES I ALSO SMILED IN LOVE  I HAVE BEEN THINKING THAT WHY DID GOD FORGET THIS WAY  IN THE LAST MOMENT OF SUN.....

HATE SPEECH IS NOT A LITTLE BIT SPARKLE......IS N'T IT ?

WHAT DO YOU MEAN BY A HATE SPEECH There is no specific legal definition of ‘hate speech’. Provisions in law criminalise speeches, writings, actions, signs and representations that foment violence and spread disharmony between communities and groups and these are understood to refer to ‘hate speech’. The Law Commission of India, in its 267th Report, says:  “Hate speech generally is an incitement to hatred primarily against a group of persons defined in terms of race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, religious belief and the like ... Thus, hate speech is any word written or spoken, signs, visible representations within the hearing or sight of a person with the intention to cause fear or alarm, or incitement to violence.” In general, hate speech is considered a limitation on free speech that seeks to prevent or bar speech that exposes a person or a group or section of society to hate, violence, ridicule or indignity.  CONTEXT A recent religious conclave held in Haridwar...

GLOBAL HEALTH PROFILE VULNERABILITY.......

  THE ONGOING GLOBAL HEALTH EMERGENCY HAS PARALYSED ECONOMIES WORLDWIDE AND REVEALED THAT THE HEALTH SYSTEMS IN MOST COUNTRIES ARE UNDER-PREPARED TO COPE WITH ANY MAJOR HEALTH EMERGENCY. It has posed large-scale health challenges as millions of people (172,430,557 as on 3 June 2021) have been infected and lakhs of casualties (3,706,682 as on 3 June 2021) have occurred. The importance of public health does not need elucidation as the pandemic has revealed that inadequate attention to public health can have disastrous consequences on the masses. High-income countries such as Canada, Sweden and Germany, despite their exceptional public health systems, have had to struggle to contain the pandemic by experimenting with a number of uncertain alternatives. Understandably, the struggle for middle and low-income countries, having weak public healthcare systems, limited finances and large populations has been grim.   India too, has been grappling with the pandemic and the ...

ACTUAL FEELING OF SOLVING REAL.......

to prepare you to face Aasma hai behad khoobsoorat, Rangaeen roshni aa rahi hai falak pe..... Sampoorn dharatal hai bheega,  Jeevan ke pahar mein Ambar bhi mahak raha, Vasudha ke upvan mein Chintan mein hai dhara, Aas lagaye sunya se, Milogi mujhe ya rah jaogi chitiz mein...... IN ENGLISH The sky is very beautiful, Colorful light coming on the sky.... It's complete strike, It will be wet in the mountain of life, The sky is also fragrant(garden) in the wake of vasudha (earth), The river is in the thoughts. Hope you will meet sunya(sky) or you will remain in the chitiz(at the location where sky and earth will meet)............ SKY MEANS SOMEONE ELSE EARTH MEANS MYSELF.

VAGUENESS IN FEDERALISM......

 Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel and Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Friday wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi opposing the proposed amendments to the Indian Administrative Service (Cadre) Rules 1954. The proposed amendments will give overriding powers to the Union government to post All India Services (AIS) officers such as the IAS, the Indian Police Service and the Indian Forest Service (IFoS) to Central Ministries and departments without the State government’s nod. Mr. Baghel and Mr. Gehlot are second in line after West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to convey their opposition against the proposed amendments to Mr. Modi. Sense of ‘instability’ Mr. Baghel said the amendments could be misused and “a sense of instability and ambiguity is likely to arise among the officers of the All India Services, who are posted at various important posts in various districts and also at the State level.” He said the proposed amendment granted the Centra...

TOURISM IS THE NEED OF HOUR WHY ?

BIG QUESTION There is an awareness in the government that the absence of tourist infrastructure is a major reason why India loses out to Southeast Asia.                 India has a vast basket of living and diverse cultural traditions, Traditional expressions, intangible cultural heritage comprising masterpieces which need institutional support and encouragement with a view to addressing areas critical for the survival and propagation of these forms of cultural heritage. Preserving our heritage is enshrined as a Fundamental Duty in our Constitution .   STEPS HAVE BEEN TAKEN Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently inaugurated the Kushinagar international airport.   ● The airport in eastern UP, the third international airport in the election-bound state, will mainly service the Buddhist tourism circuit. ●   The Sri Lankan Airlines flight carrying monks and dignitaries was the first to land at the airport. st Asian nations such as Indon...

first ever scientific bird atlas......

 The Kerala Bird Atlas (KBA), the first-of-its-kind State-level bird atlas in India, has created solid baseline data about the distribution and abundance of bird species across all major habitats, giving an impetus to futuristic studies. Conducted as a citizen science-driven exercise with the participation of over 1,000 volunteers of the birdwatching community, the KBA has been prepared based on systematic surveys held twice over 60 days a year during the wet (July to September) and dry (January to March) seasons between 2015 and 2020. The KBA accounts for nearly three lakh records of 361 species, including 94 very rare species, 103 rare species, 110 common species, 44 very common species, and 10 most abundant species. “The KBA offers authentic, consistent and comparable data through random sampling from the geographical terrain split into nearly 4,000 grids. We are in the process of bringing out papers on interesting trends based on a scientific analysis of solid dat...

The Budget spells green shoots for agri-subsectors

At the time it was presented, and in the context of the Assembly elections in five States — now underway in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Manipur and Goa https://sites.google.com/view/insightsdev/home  the Union Budget was expected to contain measures to boost consumption expenditure. But the Government chose instead to focus more on capital expenditure. There were no major announcements on agriculture or rural development. Given the recent turmoil as a result of the farmers’ protests and the repeal of the farm laws, this was a little surprising. However, a closer look at the Budget presents a different picture. Allotments, key subsectors It is important to look at the budgetary allocations for agriculture from the perspective of agricultural growth and farmers’ income. Agriculture has registered a robust performance during the COVID-19 pandemic and has clocked decent growth rates of 4.3% and 3.6% during 2019-20 and 2020-21. Growth is projected to be about 3.9% i...

MONEY LAUNDERING........The despotic nature of the PMLA

  The draconian PMLA of 2002 has evolved as the Government’s “hatchet” law in recent years, considering the series of raids and arrests of politicians, their relatives, and activists, most of them who are critical of the ruling regime. The unease about the law has become so rife that a bunch of petitions filed by people across the country have questioned the almost blanket powers given to the ED through this law. The Act was enacted in a 2002 response to India’s global commitment (including the Vienna Convention) to combat the menace of money laundering, stemming from the trade of drugs and narcotics and the organised crime that goes with it. Lawyers argue that the PMLA is invoked against a political rival or a dissenter, because the “process is itself the punishment”. They point out that the ECIR, an equivalent of the FIR, is considered an “internal document” and not given to the accused. Which means that, pursuant to the registration of the ECIR, as the ED begins to...