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GSMA calls for major rethink of India’s reserve price mechanism, warns against “oversupply” narrative

According to GSMA Intelligence data, India’s spectrum cost burden is among the highest in the world, at roughly 26% of operator recurring revenues—limiting the capital available for 5G and upcoming 6G expansion.

November 11, 2025 / 09:09 IST
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The global telco body, GSMA, has urged the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) to adopt a forward-looking and market-aligned approach for upcoming spectrum auctions, warning that the real challenge facing India’s telecom industry is not “oversupply” but high reserve prices that have deterred participation and delayed network rollouts.

In its detailed response to TRAI’s consultation on auctioning spectrum for International Mobile Telecommunications (IMT), the global industry body stated that India’s spectrum policy should prioritise enabling affordable, high-quality connectivity over maximising short-term fiscal revenues.

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“The notion of oversupply is misplaced; the real challenge is pricing and affordability of spectrum,” GSMA said, adding that the high reserve prices in past auctions have led to large swathes of unsold spectrum and constrained operators’ ability to invest in network infrastructure.

Citing data from the Department of Telecommunications’ own study “The Diminishing Returns of SMRA: A Data-driven Analysis of India’s Spectrum Sales (2010–2024)”, the GSMA noted that only about 32.7% of the spectrum offered during that period was sold, leaving nearly ₹11.6 lakh crore worth of spectrum unsold. “This unsold spectrum represents a massive opportunity cost of prioritising fiscal revenue over efficient allocation,” the industry body said.