China may strengthen its position as the world's largest mobile
phone market this year, producing about one-third of the planet's
total mobile phones, said a senior expert with the China Centre for
Information Industry Development (CCID) under the Ministry of
Information Industry (MII).
"With the shifting production patterns of international industry
giants and the rise in domestic phone manufacturers, the proportion
of made-in-China mobile phones will grow from last year's 27
percent to around 33 percent in 2003," said Shao Chunguang with the
research department of CCID, a think-tank for MII.
He
predicted that mobile phone manufacturers in China would produce
130 million handsets this year with sales expected to reach 127
million units.
According to the statistics from MII, mobile phone manufacturers
made about 100 million handsets last year, while about 119 million
units were sold.
Shao said a steady increase of new subscribers, replacement sales
and rising exports have been the three major driving forces behind
the surging market.
Although it was predicted that China's mobile subscriber growth
rate would slow down after hitting the 200 million mark, untapped
markets in urban and rural areas would make long-term steady growth
possible, with the two major mobile telecom operators expected to
attract 70 to 80 million new users this year, including 13 million
new subscribers for China United Communications Corp's CDMA (code
division multiple access) network, according to the CCID
expert.
A
report by the Research and Development Centre under the State
Council showed that 65 percent of urban mobile phone owners bought
their phones before 1999, the replacement of many of these will
boost mobile phone sales.
(China Daily February 11, 2003)
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