Telecom AGR Dues Crisis: RBI Closely Monitoring Developments

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
With massive Rs 1.47 lakh crore of AGR dues pushing telecom firms to the brink, Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das on Monday
said the central bank is "very closely monitoring" the fallout of the crisis on lenders by way of a default, if any, by telecom players.In
an interview with PTI, Mr Das said so far no red flags have been raised but the central bank continues to monitor the situation closely.The
Supreme Court last week rejected a plea by mobile carriers such as Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea Ltd for extension in the payment schedule
and asked them to deposit an estimated Rs 1.47 lakh crore in past dues for spectrum and licences by March 17.Some telecom firms are already
struggling with mounting losses and debt and the additional liability has raised concerns of them defaulting on existing loans.Mr Das said
he cannot comment on the Supreme Court ruling."With regard to the impact on the banking sector, we are very closely monitoring it
It all depends on how the companies concerned are able to make the payments and when they are able to make the payments
We are monitoring it," he said.Of the estimated dues that include interest and penalty for late payments, Airtel and Vodafone Idea owe about
60 per cent.While Airtel on Monday paid Rs 10,000 crore out of the Rs 35,586 crore dues that Department of Telecommunications (DoT) thinks
the company owes to the government, Vodafone Idea's plea for being allowed to pay Rs 2,500 crore immediately and another Rs 1,000 crore by
Friday to clear a part of the DoT estimated dues of Rs 53,000 crore was rejected by the apex court on Monday.Airtel has said it will clear
the remaining dues before the next date of hearing on March 17 but Vodafone Idea has so far not provided a clear deadline for making
payments.Mr Das said no red flags on default by any telecom company has so far been raised with the central bank
"We are monitoring the situation
We are monitoring it very closely."The telecom sector, he said, has been one of the pillars of the economic growth of India in the last two
decades.It created demand as well as jobs just like other pillars of massive infrastructure push given by the construction of the Golden
Quadrilateral highway project and information technology or IT sector."In the telecom sector, there was a huge expansion
India was able to capitalize on that," he said.The telecom boom not just lowered the cost of making phone calls and internet usage charges
but also created massive employment.In recent times, few companies in the telecom sector have folded up under mounting debt pile and intense
competition, leading to job losses
Even in the current crisis, there are apprehensions being expressed about the continuation of at least one company.Vodafone Idea Chairman
Kumar Mangalam Birla had in December stated that the company may have to shut if there is no relief on the statutory dues
"If we are not getting anything, then I think it is the end of the story for Vodafone Idea," he had said
"It does not make sense to put good money after bad We will shut shop."