What's new

$4 phone? India's Freedom 251 doesn't add up

UniverseWatcher

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Sep 6, 2015
Messages
432
Reaction score
0
Country
Pakistan
Location
United States

"There is absolutely no way it is possible to make a smartphone for $4," said Ben Wood, an analyst at CCS Insight. "You could barely put a box around it and ship it for $4."

A mystery in the making
The most expensive phones, like Apple's iPhone and Samsung's Galaxy S range, typically cost more than $200 to make using top-of-the-range components. Prices fall depending on the quality of parts used, but rarely as dramatically as Ringing Bells is promising. Last year Mozilla's plans to launch a $25 smartphone in India fell through when the company decided it would be better off focusing on quality over cost.

Wood, the CCS analyst, says basic talk and text feature phones are the cheapest options "but there is still a bill of materials of at least $15 for anything vaguely functional."

And components are far from the only cost involved in making a smartphone. R&D, testing, component shipping and manufacturing costs and the cost of putting a device together all add up. So does packaging and shipping.

Ringing Bells is currently importing components from overseas and assembling them in India. It aims to make the phones domestically within a year, a Ringing Bells spokeswoman told AFP. Ringing Bells says on its website that it has a complete in-house product testing setup in India.

At the phone's launch event in India yesterday, Ashok Chadha, the company's president, handed out "beta" devices to journalists. The phones had stickers of India's flag on the back. It looked, according to the Wall Street Journal, like branding from another manufacturer had been covered up.

What the actual phone will look like is a mystery. Ringing Bells has circulated two different images of the phone, switching the images on its website last night to show a device that looks like a squat iPhone.

In its marketing materials, Ringing Bells said the phone is designed to "empower citizens, even in the remotest rural and semi-urban centers of India, with the latest in digital technology at incredible affordable prices."

The Indian media has speculated about the role the country's government may have played in making a phone available at such a cheap price.

"Looking at the component prices, this phone certainly is being subsidized by the Narendra Modi government," Tarun Pathak, senior analyst at Counterpoint Research, a consultancy firm, told Quartz.

Modi, India's prime minister, is promoting a scheme called "Made in India," which encourages Indian companies to make products on their home turf. He has also worked on a number of app projects around issues like farming, fishing, health care and women's safety -- all of which come preinstalled on the Freedom 251.

Representatives of the Indian government didn't respond to requests for comment.

At the launch event, Chadha said parts for the phone would be imported from China and cost 2,500 rupees ($36 or £25) per device. He still believes he will make money on the smartphones due to "economies of scale" and tax breaks for manufacturing, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Even if the Indian government is involved in the project, a subsidy of the magnitude needed to sell a phone for $4 "is completely unsustainable," said Wood. "I'd be surprised if the Indian government would want to unbalance the market to that extent."
 
.
At the launch event, Chadha said parts for the phone would be imported from China and cost 2,500 rupees ($36 or £25) per device. He still believes he will make money on the smartphones due to "economies of scale" and tax breaks for manufacturing, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Even if the Indian government is involved in the project, a subsidy of the magnitude needed to sell a phone for $4 "is completely unsustainable," said Wood.

He is importing parts from China at $36 per device, and selling the devices for $4 each.

Well, I certainly can't complain about that arrangement.
 
.
Not big news in India. Simone was getting sleepless night.
 
.
This reminds me of "the cheapest tablet in the world" a few years back. Now tri-color sticker printing could be a really "Make In India" business opportunity. :cheesy:
 
Last edited:
.
$1 for labor
$3 for parts

:lol::lol:


is this India version of the Obama phone the Modi Phone

 
.
Dont know what you guys are discussing but this shit is for real

My roomates friend has ordered and received one of those phones...
 
.
you know this doesn't sound that ridiculous if the company selling these phones has some kinda contract with a mobile phone service company

that's where the money is going to be made :coffee:
 
.
I ordered and received one, although it will take half an hour to order as the buying page keep on going dead.

you know this doesn't ridiculous if then company selling these phones has some kinda contract with a mobile phone service company

that's where the money is going to be made :coffee:

In US the contracting model will work. Not in India.
 
.
I ordered and received one, although it will take half an hour to order as the buying page keep on going dead.



In US the contracting model will work. Not in India.

You are defeating the whole purpose of "the cheapest phone in the would".
 
.
I ordered and received one, although it will take half an hour to order as the buying page keep on going dead.



In US the contracting model will work. Not in India.
Isn't the order a Cash on Delivery ? How's the product ?
 
. .
I have a Nokia 130 dual sim by Microsoft. It cost me PKR 2800 which I thought was pretty cheap.

A $4 smart phone is unthinkable for me.
 
. .
If this is actually being sold can I buy 10,000 of it for the Iranian market? Even if it's crap, I bet I can still sell it for a high profit. Or is it just sold at a low number (at a loss) for marketing purposes?
 
.
If this is actually being sold can I buy 10,000 of it for the Iranian market? Even if it's crap, I bet I can still sell it for a high profit. Or is it just sold at a low number (at a loss) for marketing purposes?
buying the phone for 4$ and selling it for 20$ I can see what you are thinking .
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom