India and China will account for almost half of all new mobile subscribers expected to be added globally by the end of 2020, a new study has found.

The 2017 edition of ‘Mobile Economy: Asia Pacific’ report, published recently at the Mobile World Congress Shanghai, forecasts that India will account for 27 per cent (206 million) and China 21 per cent (155 million) of the approximately 753 million new mobile subscribers by the end of the decade.

The unique mobile subscribers in Asia-Pacific region as a whole is forecast to increase from 2.7 billion at the end of 2016 to 3.1 billion in 2020, accounting for two-thirds of global growth.

The report also highlights how the region’s mobile industry will be a growing contributor to Asia’s economy and social development over this period — and also play a pioneering role in 5G.

‘Growth engine’

“Led by India and China, Asia’s mobile industry will be the main engine of global subscriber growth for the remainder of the decade, connecting almost half a billion new customers across the region by 2020,” said Mats Granryd, Director General of GSMA, a trade body that represents the interests of mobile operators globally.

“We are also seeing a dramatic shift to mobile broadband networks, particularly 4G, which is providing a platform for a rich range of innovative new services across both developed and emerging markets in the region. Meanwhile, advanced operators in Asia are set to become among the first in the world to launch commercial 5G networks before the end of the decade,” he said.

Mobile penetration

Subscriber growth in Asia Pacific will mean that mobile penetration in the region (as a percentage of the population) will grow from 66 per cent in 2016 to 75 per cent in 2020.

However, the diverse nature of the region means that mobile penetration rates vary widely. Asia is home to four of the top five most-penetrated markets in the world (Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan), but also some of the least penetrated, such as North Korea.

Mobile broadband (3G and above) is now the dominant technology in the region, accounting for more than half of connections for the first time last year. The study notes that Asian markets such as China, Japan and South Korea are also driving the development of 5G mobile technologies.

Mobile technologies and services contributed $1.3 trillion in economic value to the Asia Pacific economy last year, equivalent to 5.2 per cent of regional gross domestic product (GDP).

It is forecast that this contribution will increase to $1.6 trillion (5.4 per cent of GDP) in 2020 as countries benefit from the improvements in productivity and efficiency brought about by increased take-up of mobile services and adoption of new mobile technologies such as machine-to-machine (M2M).

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