Mukesh Ambani laid a strong emphasis for India to consider the deployment of 5G, the fifth-generation technology standard for broadband cellular networks, as a national priority in order to promote the digital revolution. He stated during the India Mobile Congress on Wednesday, saying that India must finish the transition from 2G to 4G and 5G as soon as possible.
The rollout of 5G should be India’s national priority, according to Ambani, whose company Reliance Jio ushered in the revolution in cheaper mobile data and connectivity in 2016.
“To keep millions of Indians at the bottom of the socio-economic pyramid confined to 2G is to deprive them of the benefits of the digital revolution,” Mukesh said. His company Reliance Jio in 2016 ushered in the revolution in cheaper mobile data and connectivity, said the rollout of 5G should be India’s national priority.
India should move towards greater digital inclusion, and not greater digital exclusion – Mukesh Ambani

“We should not lose sight of the fact that affordability has been a critical driver of the phenomenally rapid expansion of the mobile subscriber base in India. India should move towards greater digital inclusion, and not greater digital exclusion,” Ambani said.
Further, fibre connectivity should be completed across India on a mission mode, said Ambani, who is the chairman and managing director of Reliance Industries Ltd. Ambani also pitched for using the USO Fund to subsidise smartphones for select groups to help penetrate the digital revolution.
“The best way of ensuring comprehensive affordability is nimble adoption of futuristic technologies and supportive policy tools like the use of the USO fund for purposes other than services. USO fund can be used to subsidise devices to select target groups,” he said.
As much as five percent of the licence fee paid by telecom operators goes to the Universal Service Obligation (USO) Fund, which was set up in April 2002 for achieving universal service objectives by providing access to telephone services in rural and remote areas and creation of infrastructure for mobile services and broadband in these areas.
However, according to the CAG, less than half of the funds so collected are transferred for the said purpose. In a report presented to Parliament last week, Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) said against the total collection of Rs 7,961.53 crore in 2019-20, only Rs 2,926 crore was transferred to the USO Fund.
Ambani said Jio has developed a 100 percent home-grown and comprehensive 5G solution that is fully cloud-native and digitally managed. Because of its converged, future-proof architecture, Jio’s network could be quickly and seamlessly upgraded from 4G to 5G.
“This is because the world is now transitioning into a ‘Digital First Era’, when almost everything will be done in the digital space first, and then translated into the physical world,” he said.
The paradigm of economic activities and even social interactions will change dramatically. Virtual will become as important as real or Actual. Wealth creation will not only be accelerated but will also become inclusive, he said.
Fibre, he said, has almost unlimited data carriage capacity. “Therefore, to be future-ready, India has to be fibre-ready.” Even during these COVID times, Jio was able to introduce Fibre-to-Home to 5 million homes.
“If all the players in the industry work together, we can rapidly achieve a nationwide footprint of fibre, just as we reached mobile telephony to every corner of the country in the last decade,” he said. Ambani said beyond connectivity, the focus should be on the critical components of the digital eco-system which are necessary for India’s digital transformation.
“The government is putting in place a sound regulatory and policy framework for this. This has helped thousands of young Indian entrepreneurs and startups create platforms, applications and solutions that can accelerate India’s digital transformation,” he said.
Already innovative solutions are seen in education, financial services, entertainment, retail, agriculture, manufacturing and healthcare.
Ambani said he was confident that India will not only succeed in containing any future wave of COVID but also stage a rapid economic comeback that will “astonish” the world.
“India has fundamentally redefined its relationship with technology in the past few years especially since the outbreak of the pandemic. Indians have embraced technology with unbridled optimism,” he said. “During COVID, when the chips were down, it is the chipsets that kept us going.”