India has fastest growing mobile subscriber base: Ericsson

Press Trust of India Updated - January 24, 2018 at 01:07 AM.

Leads with 26 million new subscribers in the first quarter

ericsson

India grew the most in terms of mobile subscribers across the world with 26 million net additions in the first quarter this year, a report by telecom equipment maker Ericsson said today.

Ericsson said the total number of mobile subscriptions in the quarter reached about 7.2 billion globally, including 108 million new subscriptions.

“India grew the most in terms of net additions (+26 million), followed by China (+8 million), Myanmar (+5 million), Indonesia (+4 million) and Japan (+4 million),” Ericsson said in its mobility report.

99% mobile penetration

The Swedish firm said global mobile penetration reached 99 per cent in Q1 2015.

“Smartphones accounted for close to 75 per cent of all mobile phones sold in Q1 2015, compared to around 65 per cent during Q1 2014,” it added.

Ericsson said by 2020, smartphone subscriptions will more than double, reaching 6.1 billion, 70 per cent of the world’s population will be using smartphones, and 90 per cent will be covered by mobile broadband networks.

“With the continued rise of smartphones comes an accelerated growth in data usage: smartphone data is predicted to increase ten-fold by 2020, when 80 per cent of all mobile data traffic will come from smartphones,” it said.

Long-Term Evolution (LTE) technology-based phones continue to grow strongly and have around 600 million subscriptions, with approximately 105 million additions in Q1 2015, it said.

“This immense growth in advanced mobile technology and data usage, driven by a surge in mobile connectivity and smartphone uptake, will make today’s big data revolution feel like the arrival of a floppy disk,” Ericsson Senior Vice-President, Chief Strategy Officer, Rima Qureshi said.

“We see the potential for mass-scale transformation, bringing a wealth of opportunities for telecom operators and others to capture new revenue streams. But it also requires greater focus on cost efficient delivery and openness to new business models to compete and remain effective,” he added.

Key factors

The report said an expanding range of applications and business models coupled with falling modem costs are key factors driving the growth of connected devices. Ericsson’s forecast points to 26 billion connected devices by 2020.

“Each year until 2020, mobile video traffic will grow by a staggering 55 per cent per year and will constitute around 60 per cent of all mobile data traffic by the end of that period,” the report added.

Published on June 3, 2015 16:34