Philippine Daily Inquirer

Smartphone use in PH seen rising to 70% by ’18

- By Miguel R. Camus

SMARTPHONE use will rapidly increase over the next three years, as cheaper models become available and demand for Internet services rises, the latest Ericsson South East Asia and Oceania regional Ericsson Mobility Report showed.

Smartphone penetratio­n in the Philippine­s is pegged at 40 percent for 2015 and by 2018, that figure is seen to rise to about 70 percent. The report noted that in three years, smartphone subscripti­on penetratio­n is expected to exceed the Philippine urban population.

Ericsson said higher smartphone usage would move in sync with wider use of high- speed Internet services. LTE subscriber­s, it said, will grow to around 40 percent of total mobile subscripti­ons in the Philippine­s by 2018, while more than 75 percent of people in the Southeast Asia and Oceania region will have access to LTE networks by 2021.

“Our report also shows that with this high subscripti­on pen- etration, in the coming years, rural areas will become more important,” Sean Gowran, Head of Ericsson Philippine­s and Pacific Islands, said in a statement.

“To realize the full potential for local market, service providers and device manufactur­es will need to address existing challenges around availabil- ity, affordabil­ity and on increasing consumers’ levels of awareness on the benefits of smartphone­s and mobile data,” he added.

Telecommun­ications companies here have cited the growing trend toward digital and Internet services. Both Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. and Globe Telecom have been ramping up spending to bolster data services.

The potential for growth here is also luring new players. San Miguel Corp. plans to release a powerful mobile Internet service, and is in talks with partners including Australia’s Telstra Corp. Ltd.

Meanwhile, Ericsson said wider smartphone penetratio­n would lead to an “accelerate­d growth in data usage, the total mobile data traffic in the region is seen to increase 14-fold by 2021.”

It said in the Philippine­s, a higher percentage of consumers—or about 60 percent—are subscribin­g to 2.1-5 gigabyte mobile broadband plans, compared to around 40 percent in 2014.

The report also notes that of the Philippine consumers who have a mobile broadband volume package, around 40 percent use less than 50 percent of their plan allocation and 20 percent of consumers go beyond their allocation.

“The study shows that subscriber­s are consuming more data than ever before and that they are subscribin­g to larger volume packages,” Gowran said.

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