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French Consumers Encouraged to Stop Spending on New Smartphones

French Consumers Encouraged to Stop Spending on New Smartphones

France is preparing incentives for consumers to shift spending habits to used electronics, in an attempt to lower the impact on the environment and provide a boost to local ecommerce startups.

The government said it will deploy a scoring system on devices’ re-usability from January, and will set aside 21 million euros ($25 million) from its stimulus plan to fund re-usability startups and projects.

Environment minister Barbara Pompili and her colleague for Digital Affairs, Cedric O, told Bloomberg that the government is in talks to boost second-hand purchasing, but didn’t detail the plans which are still being finalized. O said a new form of tax on goods was unlikely because companies would shift the cost on consumers.

“We want to incite people who want to buy a handset to think first about refurbished ones,” Pompili said.

Selling refurbished handsets has been a long-standing business. Both Apple Inc. and Samsung offer second-hand phones on their websites, and the global market for used smartphones is expected to reach 332.9 million units with a total value of $67 billion, up from 175.8 million units shipped in 2018, according to IDC.

But in France, a number of startups have been lobbying the government to start introducing legislation to encourage consumers to shift away from new mobiles.

“We’re pushing the government to lower the VAT on products with a good environmental impact including on refurbished smartphones,” Recommerce co-founder Benoit Varin told Bloomberg. On Oct. 16 he is hosting a webinar with lawmakers to show how that could be done.

Recommerce, founded in 2009, refurbishes mobile phones and sells them directly to consumers or through telecom operators, and is backed by retail giant family Mulliez. Rival startup Back Market raised €120 million euros in May, with investors including Goldman Sachs and luxury billionaire Bernard Arnault, for its marketplace that sells handsets and consumer goods from Sony, Apple, Samsung, and Microsoft.

Back Market, which was created six years ago and is looking to expand to the U.S., has been lobbying the government to create consumer incentives for second hand electronics. French ministers recently visited their offices to mark their support to the startup and the sector, where Pompili and O criticized the U.S. giants for “seeking to maintain a close circuit” with proprietary spare parts and repair systems.

Smartphone makers are slowly addressing the environmental impact of their products. Apple, which has shipped over 1 billion handsets over the past eight years, has recently set up a program to improve access to its spare parts. Companies such as Fairphone are making handsets partly from ethically sourced metals and recycled plastics.

Veronique Riotton, the French presidential party deputy, lead talks last year that saw lawmakers vote for an “anti-waste” bill that introduced extra rules including the scoring of companies’ spare parts availability and the possibility to repair and replace them.

For now, demand is driven by the desire for the latest model. Back Market expects Apple’s upcoming 5G handsets to hit their platform no less then 3 months after their initial sale.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.