Broadband Blog

Ring Side view of Indian Telecom Circus

Broadband in India:Suppose if it is free?

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Sounds to good to be true?

I have a feeling that if a company could offer free to spur on the sales for it’s voice calls, it would go against the conventional line of thinking. For long, I have always felt that since the voice calls are on the declining trend (as per the telecom companies claims), would be a lifeline in form a value added service.

However, despite all the hoopla of , Online Gaming and unlimited broadband (at a piflling 256k- a page loads slower than I pee) hasn’t taken off in this year. 2007 may still be full of false starts and promises.

Yet some companies in UK are promising “free broadband” with some talk plans. How good is it? A recent story in BBC underlines this point. It says that users of “free broadband” are less than happy. The primary reason seems to be more people signing up than the exchanges can support.

A “quote” from the story:

However, it’s disappointing to see that the majority of providers are failing to accompany the growth in customers numbers by sufficient growth in customer service operations, and the required investment in their technology, to ensure that they are looking after customer needs in an acceptable manner.

Interestingly, despite the fact that British Telecom has been opened up for the last mile access to the private players, it has actually increased BT’s revenues. Apart from earning revenue from the private players, it can market it’s own plans aggressively. It takes hard work but then the boffins in expect you to pay and not get the service in return. British Telecom is the “baap” of - the illgotten progeny that refuses to part away it’s “bastardious” ways of dealing with it’s customers.

Free Broadband may remain a pipe dream. Well until the time the critical mass can support the offer. Computers are still pricey for most and would remain out of reach for majority. And so would the grow and grow till it is unmanageable.

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Indian Telecom: Affordable?

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We could give the journalists the benefit of doubt. Including the worthy guys and greyed hair “intellectuals” who spew their wisdom without realising the import of it all. There has been a lot of talk about the “affordability” factor of Indian Telecom and as usual, I digress.

Purchasing power parity or PPP:

This is an estimate of the exchange rate required to equalise the purchasing power of different currencies, given the prices of goods and services in the countries concerned. PPP exchange rates are used for a number of purposes, most notably to compare the standard of living of two or more countries. It is necessary because comparing the gross domestic products (GDP) using market exchange rates does not accurately measure differences in income and consumption. Market exchange rates fluctuate widely, and the purchasing power parity hypothesis suggests that the long run equilibrium value is that which yields purchasing power parity.

(As usual, the ever useful Wikipedia comes to my rescue).

Well, this is a broad definition of PPP, Further, the Wikipedia discusses it as:

A common measure of the standard of living is the per capita Gross Domestic Product, which is calculated by dividing the GDP of a country by its population. In order to compare the standard of living in two nations, one first needs to express these numbers in the same currency. Using actual exchange rates when making these comparisons can give a very misleading picture of living standards. The PPP method is used as an alternative.

However, there are various factors that undermine the true value of PPP and it’s not virtous. I won’t go in details here, but suffice to say that PPP can allow us to measure the consumption patters across countries. Roughly speaking (I using approximations here) it is the value of the goods being purchased by citizens in a nation compared to other nations. For example, if one dollar can purchase 1 litre of petrol in US and the same dollar can purchase 10 litres in xyz country- the PPP of US dollar is more than the xyz country.

This is a rough idea but suffice for our present purposes.

Now Atanu writes in:

I keep hearing “ is cheap” from people who are going around comparing some Indian prices while carrying US dollars in their pockets. But don’t carry around dollars. They carry Indian rupees when they go to the market. To an American some stuff (and only some stuff) may be cheap in India. But then if the American is Bill Gates, everything is cheap. It is not the subjective experience of a person that I am concerned with here. I am concerned with whether the prices that a person faces in India is objectively higher than the prices a person faces in, say, Canada. Since prices one pays translate to costs one bears, it is important to measure costs to understand what it means that India is more costly than Canada.

(Emphasis mine)

The same discussion is carried forth in second post :

Costs can be measured in terms of time, provided we have an invariant. In our case, we really don’t have an invariant because the time to earn a unit of money varies from person to person, and from region to region. However, there is already a measure of average incomes in a specific location. That is the total production of final goods and services measured in monetary terms over a year for a specific collective of people that is called the gross domestic product (GDP). GDP divided by the number of people gives you the GDP per capita.

To put in simpler words, calculate the time it takes to earn the same amount of money in measurable quantifiable units of time- like years, months, days, hours etc. By the rationale, Atanu explains:

I have done some back of the envelope calculations and it appears that India is many times more expensive than the US in pretty much any goods and services I measure. This should not come as a surprise to anyone who has observed that Indians can afford a lot less stuff (goods and services) than Americans can. Basically, the cost of any good is the time that you have to spend to produce an equivalent amount of stuff so that you can exchange it for that good. Indians on average produce less stuff per unit of time and therefore they can buy less stuff per unit of time as compared to Americans.

I hope this is clear here. So, for the first time, we can explain in concrete terms- the affordability of the telecom services. I don’t have the exact figures for US but what I hear is that the telecom companies charge equivalent of $70 dollars for unlimited Mbps Speeds (I guess around 10Mbps download and 3 Mbps uploads) with unlimited calling to ANY number within US. Of course, it comes in with a locked in period of a specified time but then, we are not going in the details there. At current exchange rates, it would be roughly Rs.3500/- which is indeed highly undesirable. Would you pay this kind of an obscene amount to surf ?

Now, one has to be suffering from a terminal case of itis” (so as to say- an incurable disease which stunts normal intelligence and renders an individual incapable of thinking normally)- that the telecom services are “cheap” by any standards. Well, what we have seen is a drastic fall in prices- but to call it one of the THE cheapest- would be sheer stupidity.

Fine. We are being exposed to this inane crap for ages. We all know it that access is present in this country. That it is “available” but not widespread as yet. Still we persist in labelling this as “” or whatever version we have in this nation. The prices are expensive figuratively speaking, but those who can surf, chat/ email should consider yourself lucky. We are just 1.14% of the TOTAL INDIAN POPULATION who can afford computers. This number was gleaned off from National Sample Survey held recently.

So, what we get for whatever our money’s worth? A watered down service. Don’t blame anyone i.e. the ISP’s / the Government/ or Mr. Maran. The root cause of the problem is that we are a third world nation and we are going to remain as such; as long as the Congress is determined to keep it that way. We are still in the kbps stage and I don’t foresee any “light at the end of dark tunnel”.

We are moving in towards a massive which is going to become more acute as the days pass by.

By the way, this is part of the series of Digital Divide that I had promised long time back. As usual, I d suggest that you read thisWikipedia entry that defines the scope of digital divide. I shall take it up some time later.

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Broadband Blog : 500+ Posts

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Yes, I have clocked over 500 posts.

Is this something to be proud of? I really wonder. Frankly, Telecom has given me enough gist to write about, enough innanities, thrashing to the core and well my pet project to start on . I must admit that I am still constrained by lack of time.

The recent flurry of posts was to finish the 500 milestone as soon as possible. Some feeling of satisfaction. We have really gone through a lot early on to keep this up. Even toyed with the idea of having advertisements. Yet, I remain opposed to it because I wish to have a clutter free environment for myself. The same argument can be extended for others too. In any case, it’s easy to block the advertisements by Script in which by itself is a no brainer. Sorry, I don’t use Firefox and never liked it. Would you want to have double clickable blinking adverts here? Or me whoring to established interests trying only to highlight the corporate goobledegook? Or just a collection of news which others are trying to do? My efforts are to present a different, often ugly face of what we see yet don’t realise.

There is a lot that can be achieved in Indian Telecom. Yes, we have come far from the tyranny of BSNL monopoly where getting a phone connection meant that you could count your age in due process. It gave them the divine right, as if pre ordained by the creator Himself, to leech on our sanity and our common sense.

It is a far cry from what used to happen. Still, there is a lot of scope for improvement. Classical economists would surely argue about the “business” of governance, that it has no business to be in business in the first case.But, we were wrecked by institutionalised mornishness which refuses to go away as time passes.

Well, I have spoken enough. This remains my baby and I am glad to have nurtured it. With tons of thanks to Sushubh who made this platform happen. Thanks to all you readers who have given in their own incisive comments. Thanks to the Indian Bloggers who have not featured this in the only category of “Indian Telecom”- I can’t imagine myself to be in the company of those “motivated” people. Better off alone than make a sorry ass of myself to myself!

Last but not the least. Thanks to the telecom companies to take the criticism to heart, dismissing me as rants from a opinionated idiot and leaving the matters status quo. Many a times, I have deleted libellous statements which would have surely flamed you. Yet, in a public platform, I avoided.

This blog has surely turned inward looking. There is a lot I would want to change, specifically when we are lagging behind all the major parameters. It would be assinine to expect Mbps becoming a common place and we would still be saddled with narrow band; with congested networks for times to come. With a lax regulatory framework and equally assinine . This would remain a cash cow for the ministers whom we elect them “democratically” for everything.

Yes, this is .

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