
Scindia urges OEMs, chip makers for affordable telecom devices for mass connectivity, nation building
Speaking at the World Wi-Fi Day Conference in the national capital, Union Minister said, 'I must appeal to my industry, my chip makers, my OEMs, my device makers; we must ensure that we are able to produce devices at nominal cost to allow our citizens to connect to this technology. We cannot allow devices to become the new digital divide in our country.'
The Union Minister comprehensively spoke on the digital divide, adding that this divide between Bharat and India has to be obliterated by technology, adding that access and affordability of telecom are needed.
He asserted, 'We must ensure that this fight is one that is spread across the length and breadth of our country. It is like the arteries of the heart. And therefore, the digital divide between Bharat and India has to be obliterated by this technology. And for that we're not only looking at the ground... but we are also looking at the sky. Satellite, LEO and NEO both have become today a reality in India. Spectrum will be assigned on an administrative basis. Three licences have been given out, and those areas that were never connected will become connected in India.'
The Minister further said that a duopoly in any sector is not good, adding that there must be competition in every sector.
Scindia added that the role of government is to be a facilitator, not the regulator, simultaneously becoming customer-centric.
'Our job in government today is not to be a regulator. Our job in government today is to be a facilitator. We need to open those new vistas; we need to provide opportunity,' the Minister said.
Scindia, in his keynote address at the World Wi-Fi Day Conference organised by the Broadband India Forum, stated that Wi-Fi will be a USD 22 billion segment in India by 2035, playing a transformative role in the nation's digital journey.
Describing Wi-Fi as 'an invisible force capable of powering visible change', Scindia hailed India's rapid strides in digital inclusion, noting that India now contributes 46 per cent of global digital transactions. He emphasised that connectivity is no longer a luxury but a fundamental tool of empowerment, akin to access to capital and infrastructure in previous eras.
Highlighting the recent de-licensing of the 6 GHz spectrum, the Minister said this move will enable multi-gigabit speeds and low-cost digital highways across India. Policy rules for the same will be announced before Independence Day 2025, he added.
'Connectivity is not a commodity; it is an act of nation-building,' he concluded, urging collective commitment to light up every rural home, empower every aspiring mind, and fortify public services with the power of Wi-Fi. (ANI)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
19 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Chhagan Bhujbal stakes claim on Nashik guardian minister post
The ongoing debate over the guardian minister post in Nashik and Raigad districts is likely to intensify after senior Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) minister Chhagan Bhujbal on Sunday staked his party's claim on Nashik, claiming the party has the highest number of MLAs from the district in 7. 'In Raigad, we have only one MLA and still we have staked claim on the guardian ministership of the district. In Nashik, we have seven MLAs. I think we must stake a claim on Nashik as well,' said Bhujbal, who is an MLA from Yeola in Nashik district. He said that it does not matter who becomes the guardian minister. 'But, since we have seven MLAs from Nashik, I think that we must get the guardian ministership. I will speak with Ajit dada (deputy CM Ajit Pawar and NCP chief) and Tatkare (NCP state chief and Raigad LS MP Sunil Tatkare) regarding this,' he added. He was reacting after Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) minister Girish Mahajan speaking at a program in Dhule district said, 'I am becoming guardian minister of Nashik.' Eknath Shinde led Shiv Sena and NCP have staked claim on Raigad while all three parties within the ruling Mahayuti are eyeing the Nashik district which is set to host Kumbhmela in the next two years. Tatkare's daughter and minister Aditi Tatkare is a sole NCP MLA from Sena wants the post for its minister Bharat Gogawale, citing a higher number of MLAs. Last week, Bhujbal expressed his inability to travel to Gondiya in Vidarbha for the flag hoisting ceremony on Independence day citing health reasons. Sources claimed that he was unhappy after Mahajan was asked to attend the flag hoisting ceremony in Nashik, instead of him.


The Hindu
19 minutes ago
- The Hindu
New GST regime will be consumer-centric, says Centre
The new GST regime previewed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Independence Day address would be consumer-centric, with particular emphasis on the poor, the MSMEs, the middle class and the farmers, senior government sources said on Sunday (August 17, 2025). The new two-tier Goods and Services Tax (GST) structure of 18% and 5% rates will have the twin objective of making rates and processes simpler and more rational, as it was originally intended to be, the sources said. 'More equitable taxation' 'This has been in the making for a while. Our learning from the last eight years is going into this, and this will be a fundamental change in the template of taxation,' one senior functionary said. 'The new GST regime will make our taxation more equitable, and will see reduced taxes on what these four categories consume. The template will be more from the consumers point of view, and it will be put to and explained to the States from the consumers point of view.' The Centre expects any reduction in revenues that this may cause to be soon offset by a new buoyancy in the economy expected from rate rationalisation and process simplification. 'Reduced rates will not lead to reduced revenues, and we expect compliance and collection going higher,' an official said, adding that the forthcoming tax regime will be 'fiscally sustainable'. Most of the items in the 28% rate of GST will move to 18% and 'a few' will go to 40%, which will apply to exceptional items, termed 'sin goods', sources said. 'Revenues may fall in the very short run but we expect change in consumption and ease of compliance to make up for it. Thus, it will be a fairly fiscally sustainable exercise,' said a source. Deepavali deadline The Centre expects the States to be on board with the proposals in time for the Deepavali — October 20 — deadline it has set for itself to set them in motion. In a press release following the PM's speech, the Ministry of Finance said the Centre would be engaging with the State governments in the subsequent weeks, in the run-up to the next GST Council meeting. Two Groups of Ministers (comprising representatives of the State governments) — one on rate rationalisation and another on compensation cess — will have to approve the details before they go to the GST Council for approval. GST has been an ongoing topic of conflict between Opposition-ruled States and the Centre, but the latter does not expect resistance to its revamp proposals. 'The concerns regarding any potential revenue losses are not theirs (Opposition-ruled States) alone to tackle. The Centre and the States should all work together to expand the revenues, using this opportunity. I do not think anyone will or can oppose the proposed reduction in rates,' the functionary said. They also added that, since the Centre does not have any representative in the GoM on rate rationalisation, if the GoMs decide against the Centre's proposal, it would look like the States are deciding against lowering taxes for the common man. Both GoMs, followed by the GST Council, are expected to meet in the coming weeks. One source said the compensation cess will soon cease, before its legal end-date of March 31, 2026. While it was originally set to cease in 2022, its duration was extended thereafter to repay the loan taken to compensate States as the cess collections themselves had been hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. That loan will be repaid before time. However, this also creates a problem for the Centre as the cess also applies on sin goods like tobacco. 'If the cess ends, then this would substantially lower the effective rate of tax on tobacco, gutka, and other sin goods,' the source explained. 'And this is something the Centre cannot be doing. So, this was yet another reason why the GST revamp needed to be done soon.' That the GST reforms are happening amid global uncertainties and tariff threats by the United States is mere coincidence, according to the sources.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
19 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Street signs: Nifty's Rubicon of resistance, audit panel's empty seat, more
Market activity is set to pick up after the Independence Day weekend with five initial public offerings (IPOs) this week, collectively raising nearly ₹3,600 crore premium Khushboo Tiwari Samie Modak Listen to This Article The Nifty ended its six-week losing streak last week, rising about 1 per cent to close at 24,631. Technical analysts say the market's next move will depend on critical support and resistance levels. Bajaj Broking Research notes that the index is consolidating within a narrow range of 24,350 to 24,750. Immediate resistance appears around 24,700–24,750, representing the high of the past two weeks. A decisive break above 24,750 could push the Nifty towards the psychological 25,000 mark. On the downside, strong support lies at 24,337, with further weakness potentially dragging the index down to the 24,200–24,000 zone, which coincides with