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Bangladesh could show India the way in 3G

Bilal9

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Bangladesh could show India the way in 3G | Forbes India Blog

(Note: This article was published in late 2013. But interesting nonetheless.)

Absurd as it may seem, Bangladesh might soon lead India in the adoption of 3G: the spectrum is cheaper, 3G networks are ready to be rolled out and smart phones are more keenly priced.
Bangladesh held its first 3G spectrum auction in September. This was a much-awaited event, but one which lasted only a couple of hours.

In contrast to the 3G e-auctions in India which lasted five weeks, Bangladesh’s was a simple shout-it-out affair held in a conference room at a five-star hotel in Dhaka. Grameen Phone, a subsidiary of Norway’s Telenor Group and the largest operator with over 40m subscribers, walked away with 10 MHz nationally for $210m, while Banglalink (a subsidiary of Russia’s Vimpelcom), Airtel (of India) and Robi (a subsidiary of Malaysia’s Axiata and NTT DoCoMo of Japan) took 5 MHz each, with each bidder paying $105m.

Teletalk, the Government-owned operator, had been awarded spectrum earlier.
$525m was spent in all, which is about 1/30th the $15billion spent in India’s 3G auction of 2010. Given that India has 23 circles, roughly speaking the Bangladesh auction raised the amount represented by a single circle in India’s auction.

That represents comparatively good value, given that Bangladesh is a fast-growing market of 160m population and is equivalent to about three Indian circles, including one metro, as a telecoms market.

Credit in part goes to the chief of the BTRC, Bangladesh’s telecom regulator, who made sure that the reserve price was reasonable and that Government’s fiscal concerns didn’t hijack the agenda. This holds the Bangladesh auction in stark contrast to the heady fiscal objectives that were paramount in the Indian auctions held three years’ ago.

The bidders all got the spectrum they desired also, and the range of 5MHz to 10MHz taken contrasts to India where no operator found it worthwhile to take nationwide spectrum, and for the circles where they did, they only took between 4-5 MHz.

India remains relatively spectrum-starved for high-speed mobile data compared to most countries, including Bangladesh. But cheaper access to spectrum, and more of it, are just two reasons why Bangladesh may outdo India’s lacklustre beginnings in 3G. Consider the following:

Plug-and-Play: Operators claim that their equipment suppliers have installed 3G-ready networks, where engineers just need to insert a 3G card into a slot at the base station to enable the new spectrum to be used. Indian operators had quite alot of legacy network which could not be upgraded so easily.

Flat country: With the exception of a smidgeon of hill in Chittagong and Sylhet, Bangladesh is virtually flat. Roll-out cost will be less than in India, and signal quality is likely to be better.

Affordable devices: On a recent trip to Dhaka I used a Symphony dual-SIM handset manufactured in China but assembled locally and retailing for 5,000 Taka (INR 3,500). Symphony has taken the market by storm and the current adoption of smart phones is rapid. In India the price points are 50% higher.

One language: There is only one common written language in Bangladesh – Bengali – and therefore a likelihood that localised services will come up quicker than in India as application developers write for a unified market. This compares to over a dozen indigenous languages, and countless variations and dialects across India.

Hunger for Internet: At less than 1% fixed broadband penetration, Bangladeshis are more Internet-starved than Indians. The vast majority of the population have never had an Internet experience, but many have a curiosity to find out. Bangladesh is a market even more ripe for the mobile Internet than India.

Latecomer Advantage: Bangladesh has what I refer to as the “t+” advantage. It is t+3 years to 3G in India, t+6 to Malaysia, and so on. Operators should be able to learn from the mistakes made elsewhere in pricing and network.

The first few reasons point to how initial adoption of 3G might be quicker, but the last three reasons indicate the potential for Bangladesh to outdo India in data services uptake altogether. Three years into India’s 3G story, data services usage is still only just picking up. Admittedly growth has been impressive this year with 3G usage doubling since last year. But this growth is on a small base, and is only at pace with smart phone penetration (which has also doubled in the past year). In other words, 3G usage is “rising with the tide”, and no operator is showing that it can outstrip handset penetration to show a true shift towards data services use by its customers. Without industry-wide collaboration to drive significantly higher data use, and the widespread adoption of mobile-enabled services such as money transfer, the success of India’s data story cannot be assured.

Certainly Bangladesh’s preconditions seem to be positive for quick data services growth. If money and other mobile-enabled services pick up, data usage could become a real long-term force for democratisation. This country may be minnows when it comes to sub-continental matters such as movie-making or cricket, but when it comes to 3G Bangladesh may just show its bigger neighbour the way.
 
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We are not developing 3G networks anymore, we are moving towards 4G, Airtel is doing well with their 4G service (damn fast!!) and Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Jio is planning to repeat what they did with Reliance mobile 10-12 years back. I read somewhere that they are planning to give 4G services at Rs.10 per GB price!!! :o:


Reliance Jio to Launch 4G Broadband Services in 2015
Reliance Industries Ltd plans to invest more than Rs. 1.8 lakh crores ($30.2 billion) across its businesses, including telecom and oil and gas, over three years, Chairman Mukesh Ambani said on Wednesday.
Reliance Industries, India's third-largest company by market value, aims to start its fourth-generation (4G) telecommunications services next year under the Reliance Jio brand, Ambani told the company's annual shareholders' meeting. Ambani added that Reliance Jio's 4G broadband initiative was a Rs. 70,000 crore investment for the company, and also detailed the company's other digital services initiatives.

Ambani added that 2015 will see the 'phased launch of Reliance Jio across India.' Speaking on the plans of building a 'country-wide broadband next-generation infrastructure', Ambani said that "there are over 100,000 people working across the country in creating the digital infrastructure backbone for this network. They are passionate about building the largest broadband network that the world has ever seen. Reliance Jio will be one of the largest job-creating and wealth-creating business initiatives in India."

According to Ambani, Reliance Jio's network and broadband services will be ubiquitous, "initially covering all states, all the 5,000 towns and cities accounting for over 90 percent of urban India and over 215,000 villages in India." Eventually, Ambani said, Reliance Jio's network will encompass each of our over 600,000 villages.

Reliance is already testing its broadband services in limited field trials, says Ambani, with expanded field trials set to commence in August this year across multiple cities. These trials would continue through the end of 2014 and early part of 2015.

Last year, Ambani had said Reliance would invest more than Rs. 1.5 lakh crores over three years. Ambani noted that in the company's play for digital services, its recent acquisition of Network 18 Media & Investments Limited and its subsidiary TV18 Broadcast Limited will be a major factor, and will help "differentiate and strengthen our 4G business at the unique intersects of telecom, web and digital commerce, and the media through a suite of premier digital properties."

Reliance Jio to Launch 4G Broadband Services in 2015 | NDTV Gadgets

Unlike Anil Ambani, Mukesh has the ability to pull up gigantic projects.
 
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Currently operator focusing on 4G rather than 3G
Airtel start 4G service here and its got very good response from people
 
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In my city ( Vadodara) govt is setting up Wi-Fi towers everywhere which will soon see 4G services from Reliance Jio. a total 53 Gujarat cities/towns will be fully Wi-Fi cities/towns by next year which includes big cities like Ahmedabad, Surat, Vadodara, rajkot, Bhavnagar, jamnagar, bhuj etc
 
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If OP happens,we will see Indians pole vaulting into BD for the cheaper 3g rates.:jester:
 
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@DRAY, OP already pointed out that this Forbes India article is not very recent.

Right. It has almost lost its relevance now.

I am more excited about the Reliance Jio network now, it can bring a broadband revolution in India and cut our broadband bills to 1/10th of what we are paying now. Mukesh did the same revolution with mobiles in India before his brother inherited that company and screwed it up. I am personally not a fan of any of the two Reliances, but this guy Mukesh has some capabilities to execute mega projects. :)

Btw what was your previous user name? :undecided:
 
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@Bilal9 we had to auction the spectrum so that there is no complain of corruption(Indians know about 2g scam), and govt gets maximum revenue. That made 3g expensive for the ordinary people as companies paid higher license fees.

Are you confident that your telecom authorities are above board?
 
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Honestly came to appreciate Bangladesh.......... I thought they may be ahead in percapita or something


But claiming high on rollout of technology which is 6-7 yrs old in India is laughable
 
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3G is passe.. Its time for Reliance GIO. If everything goes as per Reliance's plan, It may very well put Reliance in top league again.
 
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Right. It has almost lost its relevance now.

I am more excited about the Reliance Jio network now, it can bring a broadband revolution in India and cut our broadband bills to 1/10th of what we are paying now. Mukesh did the same revolution with mobiles in India before his brother inherited that company and screwed it up. I am personally not a fan of any of the two Reliances, but this guy Mukesh has some capabilities to execute mega projects. :)

Btw what was your previous user name? :undecided:

Looks like India is progressing fast in this field, but expect us to catch up quickly. BDs are smart. 8-)

I used to be known as apo.
 
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Did you all read the article carefully?

The point of me posting this old article was not what the existing technology was (Bangladesh will be implementing 4G soon as well, there is nothing holding the market back, most of the smartphone handsets available locally are already 4G capable) - the point was how expensive the spectrum auction was in India compared to Bangladesh. Read the article above also to note how little the data uptake for the market was in India post auction, I won't be surprised to find as a percentage that data usage in Bangladesh is probably as high or higher than India.

The Chairman of the Bangladesh Telecom regulatory commission happens to be Sunil Kanti Bose by the way - a well known technocrat and above board as far as cell auction graft, a rarity within the subcontinent.

@DRAY Thanks for posting the Reliance Jio article.
 
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