Online shopping via smartphones to cross $40 million by 2016: Study
Online shopping via smartphones to cross $40 million by 2016: Study
The study suggests that as internet penetration increases in India, the potential of growth of the e-commerce industry will also increase.

New Delhi: Online purchases made through mobile phones are steadily increasing in India and are likely to touch $40 million in 2016 from the current $30 million, indicates a new joint study by Assocham and Grant Thornton.

According to the study, a significantly low (19 per cent) but fast-growing internet population of 243 million in 2014 is an indicator of the sector's huge growth potential in India. This underlines the potential of internet use in India and as internet penetration increases, the potential of growth of the e-commerce industry will also increase, it says.

It also predicts that the Indian e-commerce market is estimated to grow at a compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of 63 per cent to reach $8.5 billion in 2016 on the back of growth in the penetration levels of mobile and internet and increased consumer demand.

"The number of users making online transactions has also grown exponentially, and it is expected to increase from 11 million in 2011 to 38 million in 2015. Government of India's plan to rebuild and modernise the Indian postal infrastructure and plan to implement Digital India will also boost the e-commerce sector," says the study.

India's current dynamics are similar to what existed in China then - growing broadband penetration, acceptance of online marketplaces, and lack of physical retail infrastructure in many places due to high realty costs, it adds.

The study, titled 'Law & Technology: Evolving challenges as a result of fraud in e-commerce sector', says online travel dominates the Indian e-commerce market although online travel contributes a smaller share to the global e-commerce market.

"Online travel accounts for nearly 71 per cent of the e-commerce business in India. This business has grown at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 32 per cent between 2009 and 2013. E-tailing, on the other hand, accounts for only 8.7 per cent of organised retail and a minuscule 0.3 per cent of total retail sales," the study shows.

The study also showed that the percentage of working women in India grew 43 per cent year-on-year in 2013, which constitutes 10 per cent of the active online users in India. The women focused share of e-commerce market will increase from 26 per cent in 2013 to 35 per cent in 2016, it predicts.

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