Why you may have to pay for having a mobile or landline number
Several countries have a similar fee levied for telephone numbers. In some it is applicable on the mobile operator, in others subscribers bear the brunt.
You could soon have to pay a fee for your mobile number or your landline number as per a proposal by telecom regulator Trai which said that since phone number “represent an exceedingly valuable public resource which is not infinite”, charges can be imposed on mobile operators. These can then be recovered from users as per the proposal which is also considering whether to impose penalties on operators who are holding on to number resources with low utilisation.
Read more: Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath's latest podcast guest is a much ‘fitter’ Bill Gates
The proposal read as per a report in the Times of India, "Simply adhering to strict criteria for assigning numbering resources might not ensure judicious and efficient use of freely allotted numbering resources by service providers. One way of ensuring judicious and efficient use of any finite public resource is by imposing charges, while allocating it. Efficient utilisation can be further ensured by introducing penal provision for those holding numbering resources with low utilisation."
Read more: Twitter layoffs: Elon Musk asked employees to justify roles, rate colleagues and prepare for ‘high intensity’ work
Other countries also have similar rule
Several countries have a similar fee levied for telephone numbers. While in some countries it is applicable on the mobile operator, in others subscribers bear the brunt of this charge.
Read more: Warren Buffett just lost $4.5 billion because of this stock market decision
These countries as per Trai include Australia, Singapore, Belgium, Finland, the UK, Lithuania, Greece, Hongkong, Bulgaria, Kuwait, Netherlands, Switzerland, Poland, Nigeria, South Africa and Denmark.
How would this charge be levied?
Read more: Nvidia’s Jensen Huang has this rule for one-on-one meetings, just like Jeff Bezos and Steve Jobs
The fee could be put in place either by imposing a one-time charge per number or through an annual recurring charge for each numbering resource allocated to the service provider, Trai said.