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Pakistan to manufacture cellphones, smartphones

Max Pain

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s800 billion to Rs1 trillion telecom revenue estimated in the near future.

Pushed by burgeoning demand, and encouraged by examples of China and India, Pakistan has decided to domestically manufacture cellphone and smart phones.

"Foreign investors, who are seeking investment in the telecom sector are likely to get big incentives," Ministry of Finance sources say. They include prospective investors, particularly from UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Asean. Some of these investors propose to join hands with Chinese companies which have reputed and cost-effective technology and trained manpower. Their pans are to make Pakistan as the production base to feed the Pakistan-Central Asia-Iran, and Middle Eastern and African markets for telecom and cellular products.

Domestically, with a population getting close to 200 million in Pakistan itself, there is a huge big market for these new, hand held sets as their demand is equally strong both in the urban as well as rural areas, like far away Gilgit-Baltistan on the Chinese border in the north and Chaman in the south, bordering Iran.

Beside China, which is a big suppler of mobile phones through official-channels imports and trade, thousand more of the mobs, smart phones, and the rest of these telecom products are smuggled duty-free into Pakistan every week.

"The decision has been made by our Ministry of IT and Telecom, Minister of State Mrs Anusha Rehman told this writer.

"As soon as our domestic manufacturing starts, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government would have fulfilled one more promise to provide cheaper products to people, expand local manufacturing and ensure more jobs to Pakistanis," she also said.

The immediate steps to be taken are to float Expression of Interest (EoIs) for local manufacturing of mobile phones and smart meters under he revival and revitalisation plans of Telephone Industry of Pakistan (TIP) - the factory built by Seimens of Germany. It was the first factory which started making telephone apparatus and later on full fledged telephone exchanges and telecom equipment at Haripur in Khyber Pukhtunistan Province in 1950s. It is called of Mother of All Telecom products. This state-run factory has recently performed poorly both financially and production-wise.

IT and Telecom Ministry sources say after the recent launch of $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) prospects of Chinese investment in Seimens have brightened. It may run in public-private partnership mode, says Azmat Ali Ranjha, secretary, Ministry of IT & Telecoms. When it resumes working in that mode, the plant will start manufacturing mobile phones and smart meters. Zia-ul-Haq, managing director of Seimens says an EoI is expected to be submitted soon.

When the prospective investors look at the demand within the region and Pakistan, itself, it is huge - and still rapidly growing. Shipments of smartphones in Pakistan massively surged by 214 per cent on year-on-year basis during the first three moths of 2015 compared to the last year, says the just unveiled report of the International Data Corporation (IDC).

"The shifting dynamics of the Pakistan mobile market to the deployment of 3G/4G networks across the country and the subsequent rise in the demand of devices that are compatible with the infrastructure," according to the report.

IDC report further said Pakistan has traditionally been a feature phone market; indeed just three years ago in 2012, around 93 per cent of all mobile phone shipments in the country were feature phones since here was no network to support smartphones.

"Even those consumers that did not own smartphones had to be content with only using traditional voice and SMS services. Last year, however, the market has experienced a drastic shift to the smartphone form factor. Smartphones now account for around 30 per cent of all devices shipped to Pakistan up from 25.3 per cent previously."

The IDC report also pointed out another important factor and said mobile phone penetration currently stands at around 75 per cent in Pakistan, meaning here is a sizeable share of the population that has yet to acquire any type of mobile device. Uptake among the fist-time buyers is sure to spur the smartphone market's development even further.

What brands are being purchased? IDC said QMobile continues to dominate the market with an overall share of 58 per cent, leading in both feature phone and smartphone segments. Nokia and Voice are the other key players, with the share of 17 per cent and five per cent, respectively. The market is also witnessing an influx of new vendors, trade marks and brands.

The IDC also expects that the competition will intensify as other players such as Voice, Samsung, Huawei, and Lenovo make inroads into the market. Samsng, for example, initially, had a hard time in the Pakistani market, but recent changes to its product mix and target price bands have helped it to finally gain traction in the market, recording six per cent share of smartphone shipments in the first quarter of 2015, IDC says.

How big is the market-revenue-wise? The entire telecom sector revenue totaled Rs300 billion in the first half - July-December of financial year 2015, tax officials say.

A big surge is forecast in the future as the sector expand all round. One estimate puts the additional annual revenue at Rs800 billion to Rs1,000 billion in the near future. Dr Ismail Shah, chairman of Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) said with the use of 3G /4G services since last year 900,000 to 1.2 million people are being employed in the IT sector.

This scale of growth, and with prospective cellular and IT investment by foreign and domestic investors will provide a huge growth and big profits. Everyone inside Pakistan and among the foreign investors, is sure of that.

Pakistan to manufacture cellphones, smartphones - Khaleej Times
 
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s800 billion to Rs1 trillion telecom revenue estimated in the near future.

Pushed by burgeoning demand, and encouraged by examples of China and India, Pakistan has decided to domestically manufacture cellphone and smart phones.

"Foreign investors, who are seeking investment in the telecom sector are likely to get big incentives," Ministry of Finance sources say. They include prospective investors, particularly from UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Asean. Some of these investors propose to join hands with Chinese companies which have reputed and cost-effective technology and trained manpower. Their pans are to make Pakistan as the production base to feed the Pakistan-Central Asia-Iran, and Middle Eastern and African markets for telecom and cellular products.

Domestically, with a population getting close to 200 million in Pakistan itself, there is a huge big market for these new, hand held sets as their demand is equally strong both in the urban as well as rural areas, like far away Gilgit-Baltistan on the Chinese border in the north and Chaman in the south, bordering Iran.

Beside China, which is a big suppler of mobile phones through official-channels imports and trade, thousand more of the mobs, smart phones, and the rest of these telecom products are smuggled duty-free into Pakistan every week.

"The decision has been made by our Ministry of IT and Telecom, Minister of State Mrs Anusha Rehman told this writer.

"As soon as our domestic manufacturing starts, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government would have fulfilled one more promise to provide cheaper products to people, expand local manufacturing and ensure more jobs to Pakistanis," she also said.

The immediate steps to be taken are to float Expression of Interest (EoIs) for local manufacturing of mobile phones and smart meters under he revival and revitalisation plans of Telephone Industry of Pakistan (TIP) - the factory built by Seimens of Germany. It was the first factory which started making telephone apparatus and later on full fledged telephone exchanges and telecom equipment at Haripur in Khyber Pukhtunistan Province in 1950s. It is called of Mother of All Telecom products. This state-run factory has recently performed poorly both financially and production-wise.

IT and Telecom Ministry sources say after the recent launch of $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) prospects of Chinese investment in Seimens have brightened. It may run in public-private partnership mode, says Azmat Ali Ranjha, secretary, Ministry of IT & Telecoms. When it resumes working in that mode, the plant will start manufacturing mobile phones and smart meters. Zia-ul-Haq, managing director of Seimens says an EoI is expected to be submitted soon.

When the prospective investors look at the demand within the region and Pakistan, itself, it is huge - and still rapidly growing. Shipments of smartphones in Pakistan massively surged by 214 per cent on year-on-year basis during the first three moths of 2015 compared to the last year, says the just unveiled report of the International Data Corporation (IDC).

"The shifting dynamics of the Pakistan mobile market to the deployment of 3G/4G networks across the country and the subsequent rise in the demand of devices that are compatible with the infrastructure," according to the report.

IDC report further said Pakistan has traditionally been a feature phone market; indeed just three years ago in 2012, around 93 per cent of all mobile phone shipments in the country were feature phones since here was no network to support smartphones.

"Even those consumers that did not own smartphones had to be content with only using traditional voice and SMS services. Last year, however, the market has experienced a drastic shift to the smartphone form factor. Smartphones now account for around 30 per cent of all devices shipped to Pakistan up from 25.3 per cent previously."

The IDC report also pointed out another important factor and said mobile phone penetration currently stands at around 75 per cent in Pakistan, meaning here is a sizeable share of the population that has yet to acquire any type of mobile device. Uptake among the fist-time buyers is sure to spur the smartphone market's development even further.

What brands are being purchased? IDC said QMobile continues to dominate the market with an overall share of 58 per cent, leading in both feature phone and smartphone segments. Nokia and Voice are the other key players, with the share of 17 per cent and five per cent, respectively. The market is also witnessing an influx of new vendors, trade marks and brands.

The IDC also expects that the competition will intensify as other players such as Voice, Samsung, Huawei, and Lenovo make inroads into the market. Samsng, for example, initially, had a hard time in the Pakistani market, but recent changes to its product mix and target price bands have helped it to finally gain traction in the market, recording six per cent share of smartphone shipments in the first quarter of 2015, IDC says.

How big is the market-revenue-wise? The entire telecom sector revenue totaled Rs300 billion in the first half - July-December of financial year 2015, tax officials say.

A big surge is forecast in the future as the sector expand all round. One estimate puts the additional annual revenue at Rs800 billion to Rs1,000 billion in the near future. Dr Ismail Shah, chairman of Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) said with the use of 3G /4G services since last year 900,000 to 1.2 million people are being employed in the IT sector.

This scale of growth, and with prospective cellular and IT investment by foreign and domestic investors will provide a huge growth and big profits. Everyone inside Pakistan and among the foreign investors, is sure of that.

Pakistan to manufacture cellphones, smartphones - Khaleej Times
Dont we already? We have home grown smartphone brands such as Q-Mobile that are popular throughout Asia.
 
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Dont we already? We have home grown smartphone brands such as Q-Mobile that are popular throughout Asia.
I think they import from China, I heard Haier will open a manufacturing plant in 2015,
TIP is state owned, they are trying to revive that, so we'd have cheaper phones and local production would ensure cheaper prices
 
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Q-Mobile does not manufacture their own sets, they order them from white label manufacturers. Haier produces their sets in Pakistan though.
Haier still assembles, they are set to create a manufacturing plant soon near Lahore which will increase local production and cheaper rates

im awaiting Xiaomi to start their operations in Pakistan, their phones are famous for being the best bang for the buck
 
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Until Govt. or some private player invests in nano-tech labs for in-house fabrication, it's only a dream.
 
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Haier still assembles, they are set to create a manufacturing plant soon near Lahore which will increase local production and cheaper rates

im awaiting Xiaomi to start their operations in Pakistan, their phones are famous for being the best bang for the buck

I travel to China regularly and have used Xiaomi, ZTE and Huawei (Before it became available in Pak) and found each of these companies to be equally good as most global brands for nearly half the price. The don't come with google services installed though, owing to legislation in China but that can be fixed with a little tinkering, ZTE was the most difficult to get through. I needed to flash a custom recovery for it.
 
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Q-Mobile is just a cheap-o brand that has all the mobiles made in China and its logo placed on the phones. They are also more expensive than similarly specced Chinese phones.

And why do we insist on Siemens??
Many carriers have shifted to Huawei components for transmitting needs in order to benefit from better technology at much lower prices.
 
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I travel to China regularly and have used Xiaomi, ZTE and Huawei (Before it became available in Pak) and found each of these companies to be equally good as most global brands for nearly half the price. The don't come with google services installed though, owing to legislation in China but that can be fixed with a little tinkering, ZTE was the most difficult to get through. I needed to flash a custom recovery for it.
aint that a good thing? thats the beauty of android. its so customizeable, The Google apps preinstalled are quite bloated,
A Custom ROM is like the best thing for Android regardless of what phone it can be,
I own a LG G3 and I rooted it and after a while i try newer and better ROMS, and its always updated, no google app or bloatware.
Although OEM's rarely release Updates but due to the Custom ROM now I use the latest build of Android Marshmallow which isnt officially available in LG G3.

Xiaomi and its smiliar brands are Flash Friendly and its rather easy to Flash such CHinese phones and can be Tinkered according to the use.
which is something great. it would be great if such phones are manufactured in Pakistan,
availability of such devices would benifit us all.

we get it .......i think it's not customised for pak
There is no Xiaomi in Pakistan,let alone an issue of Google Services. Only Huawei is here and its thriving. My first Smartphone was also a Huawei and it was a great experience, its amazing how improved the smartphones are nowadays..

on a side note I heard One Plus One received quite a good response in India.
 
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aint that a good thing? thats the beauty of android. its so customizeable, The Google apps preinstalled are quite bloated,
A Custom ROM is like the best thing for Android regardless of what phone it can be,
I own a LG G3 and I rooted it and after a while i try newer and better ROMS, and its always updated, no google app or bloatware.
Although OEM's rarely release Updates but due to the Custom ROM now I use the latest build of Android Marshmallow which isnt officially available in LG G3.

Xiaomi and its smiliar brands are Flash Friendly and its rather easy to Flash such CHinese phones and can be Tinkered according to the use.
which is something great. it would be great if such phones are manufactured in Pakistan,
availability of such devices would benifit us all.


There is no Xiaomi in Pakistan,let alone an issue of Google Services. Only Huawei is here and its thriving. My first Smartphone was also a Huawei and it was a great experience, its amazing how improved the smartphones are nowadays..

on a side note I heard One Plus One received quite a good response in India.


Which ROM are you using right now? I just softbricked my ZTE Nubia Z7 Mini while flashing MIUI, now returning it to stock.
 
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There is no Xiaomi in Pakistan,let alone an issue of Google Services. Only Huawei is here and its thriving. My first Smartphone was also a Huawei and it was a great experience, its amazing how improved the smartphones are nowadays..
Oh....so these is reason .........I have Mi4i which i have got at ₹8500

Recently (2015) Xiaomi have started manufacturing of redmi 2 in india .....
on a side note I heard One Plus One received quite a good response in India.
Yes .....
 
.
aint that a good thing? thats the beauty of android. its so customizeable, The Google apps preinstalled are quite bloated,
A Custom ROM is like the best thing for Android regardless of what phone it can be,
I own a LG G3 and I rooted it and after a while i try newer and better ROMS, and its always updated, no google app or bloatware.
Although OEM's rarely release Updates but due to the Custom ROM now I use the latest build of Android Marshmallow which isnt officially available in LG G3.

Xiaomi and its smiliar brands are Flash Friendly and its rather easy to Flash such CHinese phones and can be Tinkered according to the use.
which is something great. it would be great if such phones are manufactured in Pakistan,
availability of such devices would benifit us all.


There is no Xiaomi in Pakistan,let alone an issue of Google Services. Only Huawei is here and its thriving. My first Smartphone was also a Huawei and it was a great experience, its amazing how improved the smartphones are nowadays..

on a side note I heard One Plus One received quite a good response in India.

I am myself using One Plus One & i can tell you,the phone is Bang for your Buck
 
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Which ROM are you using right now? I just softbricked my ZTE Nubia Z7 Mini while flashing MIUI, now returning it to stock.
The ROM name is crDroid. its based on Marshmallow 6.0.1

I am myself using One Plus One & i can tell you,the phone is Bang for your Buck
yes it is a very good and famous phone

Oh....so these is reason .........I have Mi4i which i have got at ₹8500

Recently (2015) Xiaomi have started manufacturing of redmi 2 in india .....

Yes .....
Xiaomi Penetrated the indian market at he very right time, Their sales have increased since then,
 
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I hope Huawei opens up an assembly or production plant in Pakistan. There mobiles are really high end stuff at half the price of Samsung.
 
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