India hits one billion mobile phone subscribers

For many people in India mobile phone represents their sole means of accessing internet


Afp December 31, 2015

NEW DELHI: India notched up its billionth mobile phone subscriber in October, the country's telecoms regulator said, underscoring the importance of its fast-growing mobile market, the world's second-largest after China.

Mobile phone subscriptions have boomed in India in recent years as aggressive cost-cutting by telecoms providers has driven down prices, leading to some of the cheapest tariffs in the world.

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The number of mobile subscribers rose by nearly 7 million in October from the previous month to surpass one billion, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India said on Wednesday, hitting a milestone that China reached in 2012.

"It is a matter of great pride for us. It shows an empowered India and an engaged India and a tech-savvy India," Communications and IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad told the Times of India newspaper. "It will mean more data, more government-to-government connectivity, more broadband," he said.

The figures do not indicate that India has one billion individual mobile phone users, however, as many people have more than one connection.

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And in poorer Indian states such as Bihar, "teledensity" — the penetration of telephone connections for every hundred people — is as low as 54 per cent, the telecoms regulator said.

For many people in India a mobile phone represents their sole means of accessing the internet, as smartphones leapfrog desktops as the most common way of getting online.

COMMENTS (1)

GKA | 8 years ago | Reply Imagine if Indians unite, get thier act together and leverage thier numbers - the results can redefine the limits of human achievement We are not there, but we are slowly moving there. We have come a long way from 1990 when Mandal, Kashmir and Khalistan, and a forex reserve of 10 days only, lack of investment typified india. I remember Mark Tully going on BBC in May 1991 after Rajiv Gandhi's assasination to refute assertions of India being a failed state. Today India is the fastest growing economy, a leader of the information age, forex reserves are 10 months cover, and Mandal and Khalistan are gone. But we have new challenges - pollution, agrarian crisis, infrastructure. Kashmir remains a challenge from the 90s, as does terrorism
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