India's smaller towns and cities are expected to contribute more in
shaping future demand for the fast moving consumer goods sector, while
e-commerce companies will contribute increasingly larger share of sales
for such companies, a report said on Monday.
"Re-Imagining
FMCG in India", a joint report by industry chamber CII and Boston
Consulting Group (BCG), said growth in disposable income, increased
urbanisation, and the increase in the number of nuclear households are
driving growth of the Indian branded FMCG sector estimated to be
currently worth around $65 billion.
"The
growth opportunity is massive, yet, the shape of this opportunity would
be very different in the future. We expect greater premiumization, tier
2-4 towns to be the drivers of growth," BCG director Abheek Singhi said
at the release of the report.
The
report said that households with more than Rs.10 lakh annual income
would account for 50 percent of the spending in the category.
"This
would lead to premiumization across categories - from unbranded to
branded - and 'luxuriating' of products," the Confederation of Indian
Industry (CII) said in a release here.
The
report said companies will need to focus on tier 2 and 3 cities and
rural regions, as their contribution will be an important source of
demand for the sector as more and more consumers move from the
non-branded to the branded segment.
It estimates that by 2020, more that 150 million consumers would be digitally influenced in FMCG.
"Their
decision making process would be influenced by digital. These consumes
would spend more than $45 billion on FMCG categories," CII said.
"Companies
would need to build capabilities in digital marketing and would also
need to push for greater clarity on the role of new emerging channels
like e-commerce would play for them and how should they engage with
these new channels without conflicting their brick and mortar partners,"
it added.
On this
trend, Singhi said: "The combined effects of these demographic shifts
with the emergence of new channels like e-commerce, proliferation of the
internet connectivity and consumption of digital media, will reshape
the FMCG sector."
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