5G is expected
to bring transformational changes in the economy. The reach of 5G will touch multiple
areas of the economy – industries, medical, education, entertainment and many others.
The potential extends beyond the obvious ones as the gains achieved will spur
improvements in areas we even don’t know at this point. Will these gains happen
the moment 5G is launched? Nobody is naïve to think so and even the most ardent
of believers know it will take its own pace and time. A lot of number crunching
has been done to study the impact in monetary terms. If you happen to pick up
any consultancy report, you can see the numbers popping out in terms of
millions and billions of dollars. These numbers vary with the assumptions they
take and timelines they consider but one thing comes out clearly- the economic
benefits will creep in or roll on depending on whom you ask. But are there
gains only?
Technological advancements
help to do things more efficiently. The
work that we do become easier to accomplish and this, in turn helps more to be
done with the same inputs. However, the advancements translate over a period. The learnings and gains that come in from the
early deployments help to spread the message and hence results in more diffusion
of the technology. Any new technology needs time to be fully exploited. We don’t
need to look further than the Internet -the ARPANET in the 1960s, to the
development of TCP/IP in the 70s, to the WWW in the ‘90s. In the second decade of the 21st
century, the internet is now all-encompassing. In the present age, the economic
implications of a breakdown of the internet can be far-reaching.
For 5G as a
technology to render the anticipated benefits, we can study it by dividing the
future implications into the short term and the medium to long term. As the 5G
ecosystem develops, certain segments of the ecosystem have to bear the initial weight
so that the future brings in the expected benefits. Let us see how the near
term unfolds.
For one, the
OEMs have to invest in R&D and come up with the needed equipment to power
on 5G- the hardware and the software. The New radio (NR) in various frequency
bands, the evolved core with 5G EPC
and 5GC riding on the cloud-native base. Standards are ongoing for 5G and with
3GPP and ITU expected to finalize the standards and specifications by late 2019
or early 2020. The OEMs have to invest resources in many fields to bring the
commercial systems on the ground. Many of them are already taking off and as
the specifications are frozen to meet the intended objectives, a lot of money needs
to be pumped in- to develop, test and market. But it does not stop with the
OEMs.
The service providers
have to test and deploy the new infrastructure. And they need to ensure that the
new 5G systems -the radio and the core integrate with the existing ones with as
less pain as possible. Moreover, the current business systems tuned for 3G and
4G will need to transform. Imagine a scenario when users carrying out a
critical transaction based on 5G technology encounter some network issue. The
user will make a call to the Customer Care to ask for a resolution of the problem. The caller may land in a situation -Dial 1 for
Postpaid, 2 for prepaid … . By the time she lands on to a human operator, the time-dependent
need may all be over. With Critical IOT, mission sensitive applications riding on
5G, the existing customer care will need to be shaped up to ensure that the response
to the customer is ultra-fast as fast as the ultra-latency that 5G technology promises.
This upgrade of business process systems through AI and automation will call
for investment in systems and for enhancing the knowledge and skills of the workforce.
Customer care is given as an
illustration but that is only one aspect. Other business operation systems will
also need to be upgraded to cater to the new scenario.
The short-term challenges
extend to other players in the ecosystem. For instance, the regulator and the
policymakers. Do they offer the 5G spectrum at reduced prices to boost the 5G investments
and hence the market or do they keep the price high in the hope that high revenues
will flow to the government coffers at the very start? The economic impact extends
even further. Let us think about the dealers and retailers who earn a livelihood
by selling new connections. Voice connections are reaching stable levels in
many places. 5G is designed to bring in enterprises, factories and other
institutions on the bandwagon. Surely an enterprise won’t go to a retailer
sitting in a small outlet for a connection. The needs of the enterprise will
need to be understood by the seller of the services. For instance, a nationwide
enterprise may ask for low latency connections across multiple cities for their
AR/VR requirements. The retailer now has to think of new ways to morph to sustain
his livelihood. Probably it will open new vistas for him like what we saw when an
unemployed driver giving his services occasionally got transformed into an Uber
driver.
The ecosystem
of 5G will be much wider in length than the current Gs- 3G and 4G. It will stretch
across verticals and sectors clubbed with other technology inroads- AI and Industry
4.0. The increase of throughput and connections is taken as granted. As 5G
makes its way out of the labs to ground trials and POCs and to actual
commercial deployments, we will hear new use cases and new areas where it will
impact the society and the economy. The industry has come a long way since the last
decades of the century gone by. There is a bright light around the corner that
holds immense promise. We need to trudge a little bit along the way to the new
paradigm.
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