• Vodafone-Idea, Airtel and Jio paid 35%, 29% and 24% of this amount respectively.
Gurugram, India, October 16, 2019 : A techINSIGHT released by techARC based on the analysis of TRAI’s annual report 2018, estimates that the telecom operators paid a total of Rs 11,838 crore as IUC or Interconnect User Charges. These charges are paid for off-net calls to the operator on whose network a call terminates.
Sharing more on the techINSIGHT, Faisal Kawoosa, Founder & Chief Analyst, techARC said, “While Jio has invested in an all IP network to support offering free voice calls, the disruption it entered with, incumbents are still not pure IP networks. VoLTE enablement is still an ongoing process for other operators, thus would require IUC to offset the infrastructure cost they bear on terminating a call.”
“There has to be a different mechanism to be worked out regarding IUC where nobody loses money and there is harmony among operators. One possible way could be allowing operators to charge a flat monthly fee per subscriber that they can offset the IUC against. Instead of settling interconnect charges, they would be deducting at source,” opined Faisal.
Currently, an operator pays a little over Rs 100 per annum per subscriber as IUC to other operators, which is a little over Rs 8 per month. Also, the subscriber number range for the three main operators isn’t too wide that would make one operator benefit more than the other. If an IUC is charged from at source from existing subscribers, operators would be making more or less similar amount as they make from the existing formula. The additional advantage that would come out of this method is that there would be collaborative competition among the operators rather than IUC becoming a bone of contention, which increasingly is.
The regulator has to enable a level playing field where a technology disruptor is at par with the incumbents, though everyone is pushed to adopt the latest technologies. The advantages in terms of being able to offer new and more services along with increasing revenue opportunities should be an outcome of technology supremacy that the operators should make as their competitive advantage. While the regulator must in a time bound manner push for new technology adoption, it must also build a healthy competitive ecosystem for the ultimate benefit of consumers.