According to a report by brokerage
"Proliferation of OTT content services such as Skype and Whatsapp amongst others could trigger a whopping 30-50% revenue hit on telecom companies' voice services in the coming months. Telco messaging revenues have already taken a 30% hit, thanks to OTT players," said Rajan Mathews, director general of
Indian telcos on the other hand still derive over 80% of their revenue from voice.
Ovum estimates $2.76 billion (Rs 17,545 crore) cumulative loss in SMS (and value-added service) revenue in India in the past two years due to growing popularity of OTT apps.
While the research body doesn't have India-specific estimates for voice and messaging revenue losses going forward, globally, it was $54.2 billion in 2014 which is expected to grow to $63 billion by 2018.
"The problem is one of arbitrage. Truth is licensed mobile operators are fighting a losing battle against unlicensed substitutable services like voice, messaging and video messaging services from the OTT players," Mathews said.
Unlike the apps, a licenced mobile operator in India has to pay a host of charges, including spectrum usage charges, licence fees,
"This is precisely why, licenced telecom service providers cannot compete. The government must ensure the same services attract the same rules, in the interest of mobile carriers," Mathews added.
Countries like France, the
(Image: Indiatimes)