COAI Believes Relief Package Will Boost Investment, Competition

The telecom operators were granted the relief package that they can use for their dues. Now, COAI believes that it will boost the industry and competition that will be beneficial for consumers.

Highlights

  • The Union Cabinet of India approved a slew of structural and process reforms for the telecom sector.
  • COAI represents the telecom operators in the country such as Reliance Jio, Airtel and Vodafone Idea.
  • Upcoming structural reforms could relieve fnancial stress faced by the operators in the sector right now.

Follow Us

COAI Believes Relief Package Will Boost Investment, Competition

After months of wait, the telecom operators in India were granted the relief package that they can use for their dues. COAI, the representative body of Indian telecom operators has claimed that the relief package is a clear indication of the intention of the Indian government towards the much-needed structural reforms that will be taken towards the telecom industry.




Notably, COAI represents the telecom operators in the country such as Reliance Jio, Airtel and Vodafone Idea. It claims that the upcoming structural reforms could go a long way in relieving the financial stress faced by the operators in the sector right now. Also, these reforms are expected to boost investments, offer a plethora of choices for customers and bring in healthy competition in this sector. The structural reforms related announcement is in hand with the long-standing risks faced by the telecom industry.

Reforms For Telecom Sector

The COAI stated that they welcome the bold and forward-looking decision that has been taken by the government for the telecom sector. The representative body of the Indian telecom operators expressed their thanks to the Hon’ble Prime Minister for recognising the sector as a crucial one that has played a major role in growing the country's economy amidst the pandemic crisis.

The body went on to state that the decision that was revealed by the Hon’ble Minister of Communications indicates the Government’s intent for the much-needed structural reforms in the telecommunications sector. It is said that this will play a part in the success of Digital India and accelerate the journey to meet the goals related to the Digital India initiative that will deliver ample benefit to the consumers.

On Wednesday, the Union Cabinet of India approved a slew of structural and process reforms for the telecom sector. The government noted that these reforms are expected to protect and generate employment opportunities, protect the interests of consumers, promote healthy competition, infuse liquidity, reduce the regulatory burden on telecom operators and encourage investment. Already, the government has expressed its intention to allow more telecom operators to enter the segment in the country to make it highly competitive for consumers.

Reported By

Managing Editor

Chakri is a go-to guy for your next smartphone recommendation. Back in his engineering days, he used to play with smartphones by installing custom ROMs and that passion got him into the tech industry. He still goes nuts about a smartphone knocking his door for review. Currently managing everything at Telecom Talk, Chakri is trying to master PUBG Mobile in his free time.

Recent Comments

Faraz :

Even though Airtel and Jio both have added almost 200 million 5G customers together, most have upgraded from 4G to…

Airtel Gained Wireless Subscribers Across All Circles in March 2024

Faraz :

I seems so stupid that they came up with backup Wi-Fi plan of 10 Mbps but killed all the data…

Will Indians Stop Using Second SIM After the Next Tariff…

Faraz :

" Vi gives 10 days free validity every month with 7 Days(1GB/day freebie) OG + 3 days IC " They…

Will Indians Stop Using Second SIM After the Next Tariff…

Rupesh :

Analysts are wrong here. Even these days, people are getting rid of secondary sims unless second sim is Jio/Vi. Jio…

Will Indians Stop Using Second SIM After the Next Tariff…

Load More
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments