Telecommunications statistics in India

Overview

India is one of the world's largest telecom market with enormous growth potential particularly in the field of mobile internet due to its high population and development potential. Airtel, Vodafone, Idea, Telenor India, Reliance, Jio, Tata DoCoMo, BSNL, Aircel, Tata Indicom and MTNL are the major operators in India. However, rural India still lacks strong infrastructure. India's public sector telecom company BSNL is the 7th largest telecom company in world.

Telephony was introduced in India in 1882. Indian telecom operators added a staggering 227.27 million wireless subscribers in the 12 months between March 2010 and March 2011 averaging at 18.94 million subscribers every month. To put this into perspective, China which currently possesses the world's largest telecommunications network added 119.2 million wireless subscribers during the same period[1][2] - averaging 9.93 million subscribers every month (a little over half the number India was adding every month). So, while India might currently be second to China in the total number of mobile subscribers, India has been adding nearly twice as many subscribers every month until March 2011. Mobile teledensity increased by almost 18.4 percent from March 2010 and March 2011 (49.60% to 67.98%) while wireline subscriber numbers fell by a modest 2.2 million. This frenetic pace of monthly subscriber additions means that the Indian mobile subscriber base has shown a year on year growth of 43.23%. Subscriber number hit a peak in June 2012 but has since declined. The decline in telecom user base after June 2012 has been primarily due to the removal of inactive mobile telephone connections by service providers.

Indian Telecom statistics

Broadcasting statistics

Radio broadcast stations: 153- AM (Amplitude Modulation), 91- FM (Frequency Modulation), 68 (1998) - Shortwave

In India, only the government owned Doordarshan (literally Door = Distant or Tele, Darshan = to view) is allowed to broadcast terrestrial television signals. It initially had one major National channel (also known as DD1) and a Metro channel in some of the larger cities (also known as DD2). Satellite/Cable television took off during the first Gulf War with CNN. There are no regulations against ownership of satellite dish antennas, or operation of cable television systems, which led to an explosion of viewer ship and channels, led by the Star TV group,Zee TV and Sony.

Initially restricted to music and entertainment channels, viewership grew, giving rise to several channels in regional languages and many in the official language, Hindi. The main news channels available were CNN and BBC World. In the late 1990s, many current affairs and news channels sprouted,immensely popular because of the alternative viewpoint they offered compared to Doordarshan. Some of the notable ones in hindi and regional languages are Aaj Tak owned by the India Today group,ABP News, initially run by the NDTV group and their lead anchor, Prannoy Roy (NDTV now has its own channels, NDTV 24x7, NDTV Profit and NDTV India), India TV, Sahara Samay, NDTV, regional channels of ABP like ABP Ananda in Bengali and ABP Majha in Marathi ,Sun network,E nadu India TV & IBN 7(the TV 18 group) are some most popular channel. The English language indian news channels are Times Now, NDTV 24×7, CNN News(formerly CNN-IBN), India Today, News X etc. In addition to BBC World and CNN, some other international news channels like Russia Today, Al Jazeera, NHK World, DW, CCTV are also broadcast. Currently broadcasting of pakistani channels in india is strictly prohibited.Television terrestrial broadcast stations: 562 (of which 82 stations have 1 kW or greater power and 480 stations have less than 1 kW of power) (1997).[6]

References

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