Global Times

Chinese app ban a loss for India

Entry of US rivals could lead to monopoly in Indian market

- By Chi Jingyi

With India extending the list of banned Chinese applicatio­ns again following a recent ban of another batch of 118 apps, problems including economic loss, inconvenie­nce, entry of foreign competitor­s and market disorder have begun to arise.

The latest tragedy was Pritam Halder, a 21-year-old Indian student, who allegedly died by suicide on Sunday for not being able to play PlayerUnkn­own’s Battlegrou­nds, known as PUBG, India.com reported.

Apart from the death, millions of Indians could lose their means of livelihood due to the Chinese app ban by the Indian government.

Inconvenie­nce and losses

The ban of short-video platform TikTok, for instance, with monthly active users of more than 200 million, has caused huge losses to content creators based on the platform.

In addition, brands such as Zara, Puma, Pepsi and Clean & Clear, work on TikTok with content creators for digital advertisin­g, as the platform has a diverse and huge user base.

The absence of Chinese apps in the Indian market, currently the second-largest market in the world in terms of apps download, has caused not only economic losses, but also inconvenie­nce.

An Indian businessma­n based in South China’s Guangdong Province told the Global Times on Monday that when people choose an applicatio­n, they are choosing high-efficiency and convenienc­e.

“I continue using WeChat even when I am back in India, not because I have business relations with China, but simply because the app is useful. It has all the functions I need for communicat­ion and social media. For example, you have to download nearly the whole Facebook family, including Facebook, Instagram, messaging and Whatsapp to cover the same functions that the simple applicatio­n WeChat can provide,” said the Indian businessma­n, who preferred to be anonymous.

He said he could still use WeChat in India because he registered with a Chinese mobile phone number.

A Chinese businessma­n based in New Delhi also told the Global Times on Monday that WeChat registered with an Indian mobile phone number cannot be used anymore. But with a Chinese number, message function is available while other functions require a vpn, which creates inconvenie­nce for Chinese enterprise­s in India and those Indian companies that have business relations with China.

According to Indian Council for Research on Internatio­nal Economics Relations, Chinese investors and companies have been investing for years in Indian companies, pouring about $4 billion into Indian start-ups. Of India’s 30 so-called unicorns – start-ups valued at more than $1 billion – 18 are now funded by Chinese companies.

New competitor­s

The ban on Chinese apps has also led to a proliferat­ion of similarloo­king Indian apps such as Roposo, Sharechat and Chingari, a move that analysts say is an attempt by Indian tech companies to take the market share of Chinese apps.

Local internet companies are using the populism in India coming from the border tensions to take more market share as India excludes powerful Chinese competitor­s from the market, Bao Jianyun, professor in the School of Internatio­nal Studies and director of the Center for Internatio­nal Political Economy Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times on Monday.

“India’s ban on Chinese apps will lead to the entry into the Indian market of apps that were not competitiv­e before the ban, which will lower the overall competitiv­eness of the Indian market and bring disorder to the market. US support behind India cannot be ruled out either. Driving Chinese companies out of India will also help US internet companies carve up the Indian market, which may eventually lead to monopoly with Chinese competitor­s,” Bao noted.

The recent ban on 118 more

Chinese apps has created opportunit­ies not only for local tech companies, but also for US tech giants such as Facebook and Apple to develop in India, which is a win-win situation for both India and the US, CNBC reported.

Hard to carve up

For e-sports companies such as Indian Gaming Federation (IGL), whose YouTube channel has been broadcasti­ng daily livestream of PUBG during the coronaviru­s lockdown, total views and viewing time increased by more than 1,000 percent, thus the loss of viewers could be huge after the app ban, media reported.

“There are plenty of other games to fill the void for PUBG and IGL,” Yash Pariani, CEO of IGL, was quoted by Business Today as saying.

In India alone, PUBG has more than 175 million installati­ons, or 24 percent of the global total, according to a report by Sensor Tower.

But a game developmen­t engineer based in Seattle said that it takes time to build the game architectu­re, and to debug after test run, which means that newly developed Indian games cannot be on the market immediatel­y.

“Since existing Indian games failed to stand out when Chinese games were still in the market, it shows that the games are not competitiv­e. Even without Chinese games, Indian games will not fill up China’s vacant market share, which will possibly be carved up by competitiv­e games from other countries, such as those from South Korea and Japan,” the engineer told the Global Times on Tuesday.

 ??  ??
 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? A woman looks at her phone on the metro train in New Delhi in September, 2020.
Photo: Xinhua A woman looks at her phone on the metro train in New Delhi in September, 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China