vodafon
The stark comments make Marten Pieters, who leaves his post at the UK-based telecoms group thismonth, one of the most prominent foreign executives to complain about limited progress improving India’s business environment under Mr Modi, who reaches his first anniversary in office next month.
Vodafone is India’s second-largest telecoms company by revenue, and one of the country’s largest foreign investors, having spent more than $12bn developing its business since launching there in 2007.
Thegroup has endured a number of problems, however, from a highly publicised $2.6bn tax dispute to frequent battles over what it complains are inadequate and excessively expensive supplies of telecoms spectrum — most recently when it spent a further $4bn in India’s most recent auctions last month.
India’s issuance of spectrum in “bits and pieces” has driven up prices and let telecoms groups with roughly$55bn in net debts, Mr Pieters said in an interview.
“The government has been very focused over the last few years to tap this industry as a milk cow,” said the plain-spoken Dutch executive, describing the sector as being in a “fundamentally worse” condition than when he took up his role as chief executive officer in 2009.
These debts now mean operators are unable to roll out services to ruralareas or to invest in new broadband infrastructure, hurting telecoms operators as well as companies in fast-growing sectors such as ecommerce.
“We have a huge broadband penetration problem in this country,” Mr Pieters said. “We are worse than Kenya, we are worse than lots of other countries which are supposed to be much less developed than India.”
“There is such a huge opportunity tobuild . . . services that would help development, both economic but also social development,” he added. “But by driving the prices up . . . you create a debt overloaded industry.”
Mr Pieters said Vodafone had seen minor improvements in some areas, citing government efforts to put regulatory applications online and New Delhi’s decision not to appeal against a recent court ruling in a tax case in favour of the UK group.But he said conditions on the ground had yet to improve with telecoms companies still facing excessive taxes and charges, which meant Vodafone had to pay “nearly 30 per cent of gross revenues” to the government.
“In general there is too much bureaucracy for the wrong reasons,” he said. “Tax collection has been extremely aggressive, and we have not seen much change there yet.”
Nevertheless, MrPieters said Vodafone remained committed to investment in India, and suggested the market would become at least its second-largest by revenue, up from fourth behind Germany, Britain and Italy currently.
Vodafone would also begin rolling out superfast 4G telecoms services later this year, he said, although its focus would be on expanding take-up of more basic data services, where “massive” opportunitiesremained for growth.
“India has a huge potential [for Vodafone], not only to become number two, but perhaps we can even see how it will develop further,” he said. “We just bought spectrum for 20 years. This company will be around for 20 years, and a lot can happen for 20 years.”
Sector de las telecomunicaciones maltratadas de la India corre el riesgo de perder una "gran oportunidad" paradesarrollar servicios de banda ancha de próxima generación a causa de la regulación de mano dura y de lento movimiento reformas políticas del gobierno del primer ministro Narendra Modi, advierte el jefe del Ejecutivo saliente de Vodafone en el país.
Los comentarios marcadas hacen Marten Pieters, quien deja su puesto en el grupo de telecomunicaciones con sede en Reino Unido este mes, uno de los...
Regístrate para leer el documento completo.