Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Details of CAG report on 2G Spectrum Scam

A nice read

The Supreme Court of India has rapped the premier investigating agency, Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), for conducting a slipshod investigation into the 2G Spectrum Scam. The Apex court took the CBI to task by stating that the agency was dragging its feet in the investigation.
The SC is hearing two petitions in the matter. The first was filed by an NGO, Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL), and the second filed by Janata Party chief Subramanian Swamy. Swamy had challenged the Delhi High Court order that rejected his plea to direct the PM to grant sanction to prosecute Telecom Minister A Raja.
CPIL has placed before the Supreme Court two draft reports of the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG), which pointed out that the 2G scam has caused a loss of over 1 lakh crore to the exchequer. Canary Trap brings you some important extracts of the CAG draft reports, which directly points a finger of suspicion towards Raja for alleged irregularities and favoritism in the allotment of spectrum.
  • Despite all agencies having full knowledge of scarcity and under pricing of spectrum, the entry fee for issue of licenses continued to be pegged at 2001 rates even in 2007 without delinking and independently pricing spectrum through a market mechanism, when the entire scenario in the telecom sector had transformed in the meanwhile.
  • Ignoring the advice of the Prime Minister, and the Law Ministry, Raja went ahead with arbitrarily deciding that the cut-off date for issue of LoI would be advanced to September 25, 2007 and the applications received would be decided on first-come-first-serve (FCFS) basis.
  • The CAG report states that “it was amply demonstrated between September 2007 and December 2008 that its (spectrum) demand in view of its scarcity was at its peak and thus would have fetched the market determined price at a much higher level than that of 2001 entry fee. If price is calculated at 3G rates, which also be taken as one of the indicators for assessing the value of 2G spectrum allocated to UAS licensees in 2008, the value works out to Rs 111,511 crore against Rs 9,012 crore realised by DoT. Similarly, for spectrum allocated under the dual technology as referred in earlier para the value would have been Rs 40,526 crore, as against Rs 3,372 crore collected. The total difference in value worked out to Rs 139,652 crore.”
  • It was evident that at the time of applying for UAS licence the substantial equity of M/s Reliance Telecom Ltd in M/s Swan was 10.7%. Since M/s Reliance Telecom Ltd. were operating in all the service area for which M/s. Swan Telecom Ltd. has applied for USAL, their application was not in conformity with clause 8 of UASL Guidelines, and hence was not eligible to be considered. DoT did not have any mechanism to verify the correctness of the shareholders pattern of the applicant and hence the matter should have been referred to the Department of Company Affairs as was advised by the Finance Wing of the Department. No Reference, however, was made to the Department of Company Affairs and instead M/s Swan Telecom was given an opportunity to resubmit a revised stake holding pattern in December 2007 i.e. 9 months from their date of application which declared that M/s Reliance Telecom had divested their entire stakes. This was accepted by DoT and M/s Swan Telecom was given the benefit of seniority form the date of their initial application i.e. March 2007. As M/s Swan did not meet the eligibility criteria on the date of application, its application, its application should have been rejected by the department and the company should have been asked to apply afresh. Even if it is was to be considered eligible on the basis of its old application, the date of priority based on FCFS basis should have been revised from March 2007 to December 2007 in order to ensure fairness. Had it been so, the company would have been out of the race as the department processed only those applications which were received up to 25.09.2007.
  • It was noted that the priority list was adjusted in Punjab and Maharasthra service areas to give under advantage to M/s Swan Telecom Pvt. Ltd. in allocation of spectrum. In Punjab service area, 15 MHz GSM spectrum was available in September 2008 which was sufficient to meet the demand of only first three applicants in the priority list i.e. M/s HFCL, Idea Cellular Ltd. and Unitech Wireless Pvt. Ltd. The request of M/s Idea Cellular Ltd. who was at the second place in the priority list was, however, not considered on the grounds of its merger with M/s Spice who were offering service in Punjab service area. By keeping out M/s Idea from the priority list, spectrum was allocated to M/s Swan Telecom who was at the 4th position on the priority list. In identical situation in Maharashtra service area, M/s Spice Communications was not allocated start-up spectrum citing its merger with M/s Idea Cellular Ltd. Here too, the resulting beneficiary was M/s Swan Telecom Pvt. Ltd.
  • Deviation from a Cabinet decision should normally be with the approval of Cabinet. However, in the present case, such a crucial decision to permit service providers to offer access services using combination of technologies (CDMA, GSM and/or any other) under the same license with the dual spectrum allocation was taken without the matter being referred to Cabinet.
  • DoT has given a list of operators who could attract foreign investments, consequent to the grant of UAS licenses in January 2008 as in the Table below (Table not included in the post). Out of the above six, three companies viz M/s Swan Telecom, M/s S Tel and M/s Unitech were new entrants in the telecom sector. The fact that these operators could draw huge foreign investment, even before establishing a foothold in the Indian Telecom market would suggest that acquiring UASL and with it, allotment of 4.4 of GSM spectrum for rollout, was the main factor which attracted the foreign investment.
  • The Unitech Wireless Services, claimed in their letter to DoT on November 4, 2008 that M/s Telenor was partnering with them at a stage when about 6 months of effort and Rs 2,100 crore expenses had already been put in and the entity’s value was not only that of spectrum. However, considering that Telenor is an established international provider of a high quality telecommunications, data and media communication services and one of the Norway’s largest companies owned 54% by the Norway Government what they would have required to run their business in this country was, primarily access to the spectrum. Considering its trained manpower strength in 12 countries, its long standing technical expertise and international experience of dealing in telecom business, it can be convincingly concluded that, the high value paid by them was primarily for the spectrum and not for other inputs claimed to have been infused by Unitech. Such huge equity infusion by the investor company was a price that they paid for 2G spectrum which was allocated to Unitech, a company with no experience in telecommunication sector, at a throw away price DoT. The value which should have accrued to the new licensees in the form of huge capital infusion for enriching their business.
  • The entire process of spectrum allocation was undertaken in an arbitrary manner. The Hon’ble prime Minister had stressed on the need for a fair and transparent allocation of spectrum, and the Ministry of Finance, and the Ministry of Law and Justice had sought for the decision regarding spectrum pricing to be considered by an EGoM. Brushing aside these concerns and advices, the Development of Telecommunications, in 2008, proceeded to issue 122 new licenses for 2G spectrum at 2001 prices, thus flouting all rules and procedures to be followed for spectrum allocation was also unfair, considering the fact that DoT introduced in artificial cap, arbitrarily changed the cut-off-date for receipt of applications post facto and altered the conditions of the FCFS procedure it had been following, thus creating an environment which cannot be perceived as transparent and fair.
  • Dual Technology was introduced by DoT in a manner, which was in contravention of the Cabinet decision of 2003, resulting in additional spectrum being allotted to certain operators at 2001 price. Also by introducing unfair adjustments in the priority list, DoT favoured certain operators. Given its scarcity value and increasing demand, a comprehensive evaluation of available spectrum was required which was not done. With the UAS policy and its subsequent amendments being implemented in a weak and indeterminate manner and with the reluctance on the part of DoT to address the issue of pricing of 2G spectrum, it was only natural that 2G spectrum was allocated at much below its value.
  • The Hon’ble MoC&IT for no apparent logical or valid reasons ignored the advise of Ministry of Law, and Ministry of Finance, avoided the deliberations of the telecom Commission to allocate 2G spectrum, a scarce finite national asset at less than its true values on flexible criteria and procedures adopted to benefit a new operators. TRAI, the regulator also stood by as a helpless spectator when its recommendations were being either ignored or misused.
The CAG draft report also mentions a note (Dated: January 15, 2008) sent to the PM by the Finance Ministry, which says that the “previous issues of licences be treated as a closed chapter and henceforth price of spectrum be discovered through an auction process.” This reveals the casual approach within the UPA Government towards this mega-scam, which resulted in a loss of Rs 139,652 crore to the exchequer.
Despite mounting evidence (from CVC, CAG, CBI) of blatant corruption A Raja still presides over the Telecom Ministry. While Prime Minister Manmohan Singh — heading one of the most corrupt governments in our country post-Independence — seem helpless in taking action against Raja because of the electoral considerations for the assembly polls in Tamil Nadu due to take place in 2011.


Source: http://canarytrap.in/2010/10/30/details-of-cag-report-on-2g-spectrum-scam/

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Current Affairs

1) Match fixing has once again took the centerstage in cricket when Pakistani players Mohammed Asif and Mohammed Ammer were alleged to have taken money from a bookie for bowling no balls. ICC has tried a lot to fiight the demon of match fixing but all efforts have lead to much success. And the unfortunate part is that Pakistani cricket, which already is struggling with internal politics and teams refusing to play in Pakistan, has been linked to match fixing on almost all times whenever a match fixing racket has been busted.
2) Vedanta's bauxite mining project in Niyamgiri hills of Orissa has been rejected by the Environment minstry for violating many forest acts. The project was worth $1.7 Billion. Environment Minister jairam Ramesh also said that Orissa government had also violated the forest act.
3) In a surprise move, which would shock IT C's CEO Y V Deveshwar, Mukesh Ambani bought 14.12% of promoter's stake in East India Hotels, the owners of the Oberoi chain of hotels. EIH expected a hostile bid from ITC which already hass IHC under its umbrella.
4) Arjun Atwal became the first Indian to win in US PGA tour with a victory in the Wyndham Championship and is the first qualifier to win since 1986.
5) Finally, with the Tata group looking for a new Chairman as the backdrop, this link below, an article from business world , 2003edition, is an interesting read:

www.businessworldindia.com/august/coverstory01.asp


  

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Current Affairs

1.Cairn India bought by Vedanta for $9.6 billion(60% stake).Vedanta is an out and out mining company so the decision to enter into energy sector has not gone down well with the minority shareholders.

2. Mahindra and Mahindra have emerged as the preffered bidder for torubled South Korean vehicle manufacturer Ssangyong Motor at $400 milllion.mahindra stock has taken a beating since it started pursuing the fourth largest automobile manufacturer in South Korea which already has a huge debt.

3.Oracle filed a complaint in a Northern California federal court accusing Google of deliberately infringing various Java-related patents and copyrights that Oracle acquired with its purchase of Sun Microsystems. The suit asserts seven patents, claiming infringement by Android, including Android's Dalvik virtual machine and the Android software development kit.

4.Wikileaks came under intense criticism when it published first 77,000 records(military records) of american military information related to Afghan war.Remaining 15,000 records are part of a massive cache of some 92,000 records related to Afghan war that came into Wikileaks' possession, most likely as a result of US Army intelligence specialist Bradley Manning, who has been charged with leaking secret US documents including video showing an Apache helicopter firing on unarmed people on a Baghdad street.Officials have said remaining documents could be even "more explosive".
(WikiLeaks or Wikileaks is an international organization that publishes anonymous submissions and leaks of otherwise unavailable documents while preserving the anonymity of sources. Its website, launched in 2006, is run by The Sunshine Press.)


NOTE: a nice link to view events in a week:  http://headlinesindia.mapsofindia.com/musings/index.html

Indian economy

NEW DELHI: The two hands to produce count for more than that one mouth to feed, after all. Driven by a sterling demographic dividend, continuing structural reform and globalisation, India is poised to accelerate its growth rate to 9-9.5% over 2013-15, even as China will cool down to a more sedate 9% by 2012 and to 8% by 2015. So finds a new report by Morgan Stanley, authored by Chetan Ahya (managing director for Asia and India economist, who writes a monthly column for ET) and Tanvee Gupta.




India has one of the lowest median ages among the major economies. When an economy prospers, first its death rate and then, its birth rate falls. As this trend proceeds, there is a big bulge in the working age population while the non-working population (the young and the old) shrink as a share of the population. The lowering of the dependent (non-working) population to working age population ratio has twin effects.



One, it allows people to save a large proportion of their income, raising the country’s rate of savings; two, it boosts the number of people who work and contribute to growth. Thanks to structural reform, the additional hands available for work find work. Even with stagnant per capita output, the sheer increase in the number of workers would raise GDP growth. With reform pushing up productivity per worker, GDP would rise even faster.







Globalisation gives additional job opportunities, additional capital to augment rising domestic savings and additional know-how. With this happy combination, the report expects India to become the world’s fastest-growing economy. The government’s chief economic advisor Kaushik Basu has been forecasting such a development as well.



“Real GDP growth in China has averaged 10% annually over the past 30 years, compared with 6.2% in India. During this period, China’s GDP grew 16 times to $5 trillion whereas India’s rose seven times to $1.2 trillion. China’s exports (including services) surged 65 times over this period to $1,330 billion while India’s exports increased 22 times to $250 billion” says the report.



China has overtaken Japan to become the world’s second-largest economy. China’s demographic transition pushed up its savings rate above 30% in 1985, while India’s savings rate crossed that level only in 2005. India’s consumption level will now come down, even as China’s will rise.



Underlying the Morgan Stanley forecast is the assumption that India will significantly jack up its expenditure on infrastructure and in plant and machinery. Infrastructure expenditure has gone up from 5.4% of GDP in 2005 to 7.5% in 2009 and is poised to go up to 8% of GDP in 2010. Over 2012-17, the forecast is that India’s infrastructure spend would be $1 trillion as compared with $530 million over the previous five-year period.



Another assumption is on the quantity and quality of the young people coming into the workforce. While India will be the largest contributor to the world’s workforce — all of 136 million people — over the next 10 years (fully a quarter of the entire world’s additional workforce), China will add just 23 million.
 
Source: economic times
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/India-to-become-worlds-fastest-growing-economy-by-2013-15-Morgan-Stanley/articleshow/6322333.cms

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Blackberry controversy

In a new twist to the BlackBerry controversy, the government on Wednesday said the onus of giving access to security agencies to monitor the information on these smart phones lies with the service providers.

Government sources said, according to the licensing conditions, the service providers are liable to put in a mechanism to allow the security agencies to intercept any conversation or message of any subscriber whenever required.

As telecom service providers like Airtel, Vodafone, RCom, the Tatas and the government-run BSNL and MTNL are offering BlackBerry services, it is the responsibility of these operators to ensure that the security agencies get access to all services they offer.

Sources further said the maker of BlackBerry phones, Research in Motion (RIM), has conveyed to the operators that services like email and voicemail can be intercepted by the security agencies but no commitment has been given to services like BlackBerry Messager.


Source--Economic Times

Note: As of now, emails and messages thru blackberry are undecipherable by security agencies in India.China may be provided a special server by RIM for tracking these mails/messages after  the Chinese government raised a similar concern.RIM has agreed to decompress the data files of messages, voice mails and consumer emails but enterprise emails and chats will still remain undecipherable due to high degree of encryption.Indian Govt is putting pressure on RIM to remove this one last hurdle.

Monday, August 2, 2010

1.Explain the spike..?
  


2. Connect. (This is a sitter).You have to identify all the three pics first.



3. Started in 1822,by siblings Joseph and Edward who originally sold salt from a pack horse somewhere in england,this company is now owned by a famous Indian company which is world's 2nd largest manufacturer and distributor of the product it sells.
Name the company..








4.Again a Sitter... Identify the pictures and connect them


5.Biz Question..Connect.


Note: Post your answers as comments...
This quiz blog is the joint effort of Shardul Bahuguna And Roshan Jha Of IIM ROHTAK...

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Some facts

SLR
Statutory Liquidity Ratio is the amount of liquid assets, such as cash, precious metals or other short-term securities, that a financial institution must maintain in its reserves.

The objectives of SLR are:
  1. To restrict the expansion of bank credit.
  2. To augment the investment of the banks in Government securities.
  3. To ensure solvency of banks. A reduction of SLR rates looks eminent to support the credit growth in India.
The maximum and minimum limits for the SLR are 40% and 25% were respectively.But, floor rate of 255 has now been removed.
Currently, SLR is 25%
CRR
The reserve requirements (or cash reserve ratio) is a state bank regulation that sets the minimum reserves each bank must hold to customer deposits and notes. It would normally be in the form of fiat currency stored in a bank vault (vault cash), or with a central bank.

Currently, CRR is 6%
BANK RATES
Repo rate: 5.75%
Reverse Repo rate: 4.5%
 EPF rate: 8.5%

Facts and figures
China has overtaken Japan as the 2nd largest economy in the world.
India is 11th largest economy in the world with a GDP of 1.235 trillion
India is the 4th largest economy on the basis of Purchasing Power Parity.
India’s per capita income is $1030.China’s is $3800.
Sector Contribution to GDP(est):55% service, 28% industry and 17% agriculture.
BPL Population: 28- 42% estimated .(BPL is income below  $1.25 per day)
India GDP growth rate 2009-10: 6.8%
India Population: 118 crores











































Indian Economic Indicators
Growing domestic demand and increased production have changed the Indian economy. GDP has picked up, trade has become global and the services sector has led change by throwing its gates open to outsourcing. India’s educated and English speaking population became the biggest impetus that the economy needed. Indian economic indicators are pointing towards the country’s transition to a developed economy. Trade has risen by more than 375% since the adoption of the liberalization policies.
Indian Economic Indicators
India’s gross domestic product (purchasing power parity) was $3.561 trillion in 2009. It was up from $3.344 trillions in 2008 and $3.113 trillion in 2007. India ranked fifth in the world in terms of its purchasing power.
The official exchange rate GDP was $1.095 trillion in 2009 with per capita GDP at $3,100. This was an increase from $2,900 in 2008 and $2,800 of 2007. However, India’s world ranking was 164 due to its high variance in income and disparate wealth distribution.
Real GDP growth was 6.5% in 2009, down from 7.4% and 9% in 2008 and 2007, respectively. The largest contribution towards GDP came from the services sector, which contributed 58.4% of the total GDP. The industry sector contributed 25.8% and agriculture added 15.8% to the GDP. Services kept its position as the biggest employer as well for the huge workforce of 467 million people. Services employed 62.6%, while industry generated 20% and agriculture pitched in 17.5% of the total jobs.
Indian Economic Indicator: Inflation
Through a strict credit policy and stringent fiscal arrangements, India could somewhat evade the recession. However, inflation has been a cause of concern. The 2009 figure confirmed inflation at 10.7%, up from 8.3% in 2008. With industrial growth at 7.6% in 2009, India ranked as the twelve most progressive country in the world.
Indian Economic Indicator: FDI
The modern and liberalized Indian economy is a hotspot for FDI (foreign direct investment). Every year the volume seems to grow larger and 2009 was no exception. With FDI growing from $123.4 billion in 2008 to $161.3 billion in 2009, the Indian economy has become the favorite spot for global investors to hedge their investments and make profits in an economy where disposable income is rising steadily.