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Mobile phone tariffs could dip: Bharti

Mobile phone tariffs, which are already the lowest in the world, are set to fall down further, reports Archana Kahtri.

Updated on: Feb 20, 2008 10:32 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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Consumers rejoice. Telecom operators promise you a tariff war.

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HT Image

Mobile phone tariffs, which are already the lowest in the world, are set to fall down further. Bharti Airtel, which slashed local call rates to one rupee per minute across all its plans in the first week of January, is open to slashing local call tariffs further.

“The existing market is so competitive that tariffs are bound to fall further," Manoj Kohli, President of Bharti Airtel, told Hindustan Times.

All other telecom operators had quickly matched Airtel’s revised rate of one rupee per minute across all the tariff plans.

However, earlier this month, Sunil Mittal, the Chairman and Managing Director of Bharti Group, had discounted tariff cuts, saying customers were more inclined to seek innovative offerings and better services.

Kohli discounted any threat from the entry of new players in the market, saying they will not be able to match up to entrenched leaders.“We don’t think that they will be viable”, said Kohli.

The new telecom entrants may not be able to match the existing players, but the entry of CDMA players like Reliance Communications and Tata Teleservices into the GSM space is bound to offer stiff competition to the incumbents. That, indeed, is expected to unleash a new bonanza in telecom tariffs for mobile phone users. Reliance Communications has already announced that it will start out with GSM services that are much cheaper than those offered by incumbents.

Airtel has 60 million mobile phone subscribers, and is targeting 125 million subscribers by 2010. The company also plans to cover 90 percent of the country’s population in two years' time.

 
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