Popular Articles

cheap cigarettes
Andrew Yule to invite bids for DPSC on Nov 20
A month after the Company Law Board"s (CLB) order allowing Descon to bid for its parent firm Dishergarh Power Supply Company (DPSC), Andrew Yule would invite financial bids for the power utility on November 20.

No fear of asset bubble on rising inflows: RBI
A day after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) tightened norms governing external commercial borrowings (ECB), Governor D Subbarao said the capital flow into India was in line with the requirement and current account deficit.

News of the day

payday loans online
Toyota says hybrid sales reach two-million mark
Toyota Motor said today that global sales of its hybrid vehicles had topped the two-million mark since their launch in 1997, led by the Prius — Japan"s top-selling car for the past four months.
Home Business

DTH operators want a stronger association

Complaining of high taxation and inability to lobby effectively before government agencies, Direct-to-Home (DTH) television companies have called for strengthening the DTH Operators Association of India (DOAI), the apex body of all DTH operators. - Monsoon gifts Yavatmal"s "suicide zone" another gloomy future - Government approves Rs 393-cr FDI proposals - Govt okays 13 FDI proposals worth Rs 393 cr - Nazara plans new games for festive season - Dish TV partners Indiatimes for mobile VAS - DTH operators ask govt to rationalise taxes Formed in early 2008, the DOAI members include all the existing private DTH operators: Dish TV, Tata Sky, Sun Direct, Big TV, Digital TV and Videocon. “The association has to work effectively, which it has not done so far,” said Vikram Kaushik, CEO, Tata Sky, the second-largest private DTH operator, having a gross subscriber base of over 4.5 million. Sources say the five-player private DTH industry, with over 15.5 million subscribers face a combined losses in excess of Rs 3,000 crore this year. The reasons include higher cost of operations coupled with a combined tax rate of around 50 per cent, enforced by both central and state governments. This has propelled the need to have a more effective DTH association, some players feel. “The taxes levied on us are among the highest in the country. We all are losing money, yet government feels that all DTH players have enough cash to burn. There is a constant need to sensitise the governments, which DOAI can do effectively. We also need a separate broadcast regulator for the sector, as the current regulator has a telecom mindset,” Kaushik says. Says Jawahar Goel, MD, Dish TV, the country’s largest operator, with 5.2 million subscribers, on DOAI: “We are a small body now, with only a handful of players. We have got some success as an industry body on the entertainment tax issue in Uttar Pradesh. We are taking up issues that are common.” Industry sources also say, however, that DOAI has not been an effective body because of several key differences among DTH operators, specially on issues like interoperability or portability of DTH set-top boxes, further expansion of foreign investment caps, pricing of pay channels and carriage fees paid by broadcasters. Says Ajay Puri, CEO, Airtel Digital TV: “While DOAI has made representations to the government, we are not as strong as Cellular Operators Association of India, the apex body of all GSM mobile companies. We need to find a person to head DOAI who can devote his entire time to the cause of DTH players.” Currently, the heads of some of the companies tend to talk directly to each other for consultation and seek independent appointments with the I&B ministry, rather than meeting as an association, insiders say.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):