BusinessLine (Chennai)

DTH, cable TV players advocate forbearanc­e in broadcasti­ng

Jio flays regulators for neglecting NTO’s fundamenta­l flaws

- Our Bureau Mumbai

DTH and cable operators including Hathway, Jio and Airtel have urged the regulator to put the broadcasti­ng sector under forbearanc­e.

Submitting comments to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, they said that the New Broadcasti­ng Policy, which is currently in the works, should take a forbearanc­e-based approach and only regulate instances of market failure, noting that the New TariŽ Order regime is excessivel­y constraini­ng the broadcasti­ng industry.

In its opening comments to TRAI, Hathway asked the regulator to look at forbearanc­e at the retail level arguing “The prevailing regulatory framework, commonly known as New TariŽ Order (NTO) imposes extensive regulation­s on nearly all aspects of the television broadcasti­ng industry. This excessive control has significan­tly constraine­d the industry’s capacity to adapt and cater to consumer demands in line with market forces, thereby hindering its flexibilit­y and responsive­ness.”

The operators pointed out that the New TariŠ Order regime is in stark contrast with the approach in the telecom sector, where significan­t growth was propelled by competitiv­e market forces

Jio went on to say that despite several attempts and amendments in NTO, the regulators have failed to address the fundamenta­l flaws with the policy. The NTO regime is in stark contrast with the forbearanc­e-based approach in the telecommun­ications sector, where significan­t growth was propelled by competitiv­e market forces according to Jio.

“NBP-2024 should aim to attract investment­s into the sector. Achieving this requires granting forbearanc­e to the industry, empowering it to

meet market demands and offer innovative services to customers. The regulatory interventi­ons should be limited solely to areas where there are concerns about market failure or instances where service providers are unable to reach an agreement,” Jio added.

AIRTEL’S CONCERN

On the retail side, under NTO – the TRAI regulates the pricing of channels in the broadcasti­ng sector. Broadcaste­rs vehemently opposed price revisions under NTO 2.0, since TRAI reduced pricing for a-lacarte

channels. Airtel indicated that State-mandated pricing should not be present in the new regulatory regime. “We recommend that the National Broadcasti­ng Policy should bring about complete forbearanc­e in the regulatory pricing framework.

It will enable orderly growth, reduce prices, improve quality of service and will ultimately benefit the consumer and will also restore the fundamenta­ls of the industry and enable long term viability, sustainabi­lity and competitiv­eness,” they said.

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