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India Overtakes the US To Become the World's Second Largest Smartphone Market (techcrunch.com) 70

A reader shares a report: Move over America, India is now the world's second largest smartphone market. That's according to a new report from Canalys which claims smartphone shipments in India crossed the 40 million mark for the first time in Q3 2017 courtesy of 23 percent annual growth. That means that India has overtaken the U.S. on sales with only China ahead of it. Given the huge gulf in populations -- India's stands at over 1.3 billion while the U.S. is around 320 million -- the move had been expected for some time, but recent developments, including demonetization in late 2016, set progress back during recent quarters. "This growth comes as a relief to the smartphone industry. Doubts about India's market potential are clearly dispelled by this result," Canalys analyst Ishan Dutt said in a statement.
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India Overtakes the US To Become the World's Second Largest Smartphone Market

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  • Wow, the country with the second largest population is the second largest market. Who could believe it?

    • Relax: The USA's smartphones still have bigger screens and generate much more CO2 when you use them.

    • But I still don't know why it is a news here... If the population of the country is 4x times the U.S. population, why wouldn't it be a surprise if their sale become higher at some point? Or they (phone companies) are trying to encourage Americans to own 2+ smartphone each now, so that Americans can brag about being the largest or second largest again?

      • by slew ( 2918 )

        But I still don't know why it is a news here... If the population of the country is 4x times the U.S. population, why wouldn't it be a surprise if their sale become higher at some point? Or they (phone companies) are trying to encourage Americans to own 2+ smartphone each now, so that Americans can brag about being the largest or second largest again?

        Of course we have a "cell-phone gap" and this time it is more than likely actually real.

        Then again, just like our "fast-food" culture, I have no idea why they would be willingly following us down this rabbit hole given the potential consequences [theatlantic.com]...

        I say we cede the high ground to China and India on this front...

    • Wow, the country with the second largest population is the second largest market. Who could believe it?

      When you look at how much poverty there used to be in India, it is a sign that America's place in the world is slowly being eroded. And this should be a concern for all of us who like things like free and democratic and English speaking. With China and India rising in power, the proliferation of tyranny and oppression rises with it.

      But ignore all that, Hillary had her own email server. That's really what we all need to worry about instead...

  • Chasing the dragon's tail of profits makes companies do funny things. Saturating a market for one. Make sure everyone who wants one has one and then what? You release a new version. Fine but what features are you going to sell it on? And what happens when you run out of new features? From what we've seen so far, you start removing things from the base product and hope no one remembers it in a year or two when you reintroduce it.

    Or you jump ships and find a market that's not saturated to the same extent and

    • by Anonymous Coward

      From what we've seen so far, you start removing things from the base product and hope no one remembers it in a year or two when you reintroduce it.

      Coming soon: headphone jack on the iPhone... but only on the high end version.

  • by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Friday October 27, 2017 @10:38AM (#55444309)

    So where do they out source their Tech Support to? ;)

  • Given the claim at the end of the summary, I went to RTFA to see if these were el-cheaply phones or the kind of phone manufacturers actually would want to sell. Unfortunately Tech Crunch’s site seems to be totally borked on my smartphone’s display... so I still don’t know the answer.

  • The Indian smartphone market may be larger in unit volume. However, they are likely lower priced models. I suspect the US market is larger in terms of smart phone revenue, where people will line up to pay $1000 for the new iPhone.
    • The Indian smartphone market being large makes sense because for a lot of people, that is their main computing device. Other countries, the smartphone is a secondary device and usually paired with a laptop or desktop, perhaps with a tablet as well.

      What would be interesting is designing a smartphone from the ground up as a primary computing device. This would mean far more sophisticated backups (which are encrypted), ease of recovery over the air, even if one's ROM was corrupted, choices of ROMs, more fle

  • Not being a huge fan of India, I'm fairly sanguine about the news. Smartphones are mostly an scourge on concentration and social skills. Let the Indians lap them up and poison their kids and culture with them, too. If they didn't they'd have more than just the H1B program helping them trash the American job market - they'd have an actual *advantage* (other than only being cheap, English speaking, and numerous like today).
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • A bunch of low-end phones isn't exactly the way things go.
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Friday October 27, 2017 @01:51PM (#55445879) Journal
    In India there is no standard universal ID that could be used to track you and find you. If you don't look like a foreigner you can disappear into the crowds and acquire an Indian identity and passport. So many people from Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Burma have done that. Government is trying to create something called Aadhar (meaning proof) to create a nationwide id system. Lots of opposition to Aadhar.

    Government wants the cell phones to be tied to Aadhar. To combat terrorism, they say. Some states are opposing this.

    This requirement could drag down phone sales and market size. Or a scramble to acquire more burner phones before the Aadhar tie up is completed.

  • The average selling prices in India are far lower than in many other countries, so India still has quite a ways (i.e., many years) to catch the US in terms of revenue. See this link [gfk.com] for some idea of the units and revenues. [The link shows stats per region, but North America is dominated by the US, and emerging Asia is dominated by India.] The average selling prices in India, China, and the US are $180, $332, and $400, respectively.

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