Thanks for the clarification and extra info, interesting indeed. One assumes the last sentence is simply perhaps due to an increase in quality of cameras on smartphones and the larger number of people carrying them every day, not feeling the need for a 'dedicated' extra device with which to take pictures?
Well, that is one reason which has impact mainly on the use of digital compact cameras.
There are several other reasons, too:
1. Market over-saturation: The market has been simply "flooded" with digital cameras for over a decade; now there is at least one digital camera in almost every household.
2. The change from film as main photographic medium to digital imaging as main photographic medium is completed: Those who wanted to give up film have all done that, those who want to use both film and digital have also made their decisions, and those who prefer film have also made their decisions and stay with film.
Therefore (almost) no growth potential anymore from film shooters converting to digital.
3. Digital shooters are realising now how expensive digital is if you follow the digital camera industries marketing, especially concerning system cameras (interchangeable lens camers ILC = DSLRs and mirrorless): Buying a new ILC camera in a 3-4 year cycle is extremely expensive (and often more expensive than shooting film). Most photographers with average income simply cannot afford such a buying behaviour. And they also see no need anymore for that, because the 'improvements' of the new models are often quite tiny. And simply not enough to justify buying a new camera.
So the customers just use their digital (ILC) cameras for longer periods. The average using time is increasing from year to year.
In some years we will probably see that digital camera users are using their cameras for similar periods before 'upgrading' as film shooters did in the 80ies, 90ies and beginning 00ies.
And then it will become interesting again:
The main reason why camera manufacturers embraced digital technology so fast was that they thought "we are now not only camera manufacturers, but also "film" manufacturers at the same time": If the photographer wants better quality, he has to buy a complete new camera. Fine for the camera maker, bad for the customer.
They were right for some years, this business model worked very well until 2010 with compact cameras (since then the sales collapsed), and until 2012 with ILC cameras (since then significant decrease in sales).
This business model is working worse from year to year.
And when we reach the point I've mentioned above (similar using / buying cycles for digital and film cameras), it makes no big difference anymore for the manufacturer whether he sells a digital or a film camera.
Therefore I wouldn't be surprised if we see new film cameras in some years (there was quite solid information about that already at last Photokina).
The more interesting question for me is not so much whether we will see new film cameras, but
- when (in 2, 3, 5, 7 years?)
- from which manufacturers ( I've have some guesses

)
- how will these cameras be designed? Perhaps the most interesting question

.
Best regards,
Henning