Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
process
of
putting
together
a
regulatory
framework
for
electronic
commerce
in
the
country
is
finally
speeding
up.
A
task
force
of
the
Union
Commerce
Ministry
has
submitted
the
draft
National
Policy
on
Electronic
Commerce,
which
will
now
be
studied
by
a
70
member
think
tank
chaired
by
Suresh
Prabhu,
the
Union
Commerce,
Industry
and
Civil
Aviation
Minister.
India's
e
tail
business,
estimated
to
be
worth
around
$25
billion,
is
still
a
fraction
of
the
overall
retail
sector
in
the
country,
but
it
has
been
witness
to
some
frenetic
activity
of
late,
including
the
merger
between
home
grown,
but
Singapore
based,
Flipkart
and
global
giant
Walmart.
Over
the
coming
decade,
the
e
commerce
pie
is
expected
to
swell
to
$200
billion,
fuelled
by
smartphones,
cheaper
data
access
and
growing
spends.
The
draft
policy
proposes
the
creation
of
a
single
national
regulator
to
oversee
the
entire
industry,
although
operationalising
its
different
features
would
require
action
from
multiple
Ministries
and
regulators.
This
would
also
need
amendments
to
existing
legislation
and
rulebooks.
Consumer
protection
norms
to
guard
online
shoppers
from
possible
frauds
too
are
overdue.
As
per
data
available
for
the
first
eight
months
of
2017
18,
over
50,000
e
commerce
grievances
were
made
to
the
Consumer
Affairs
Ministry
helpline.
Traditional
retailers
too
have
voiced
concerns
about
large
e
tail
players
with
deep
pockets
pricing
them
out
of
the
market,
and
have
been
seeking
a
level
playing
field.
Much
work,
however,
remains
to
be
done
to
forge
a
cohesive
framework
from
the
draft.
Among
the
ideas
in
the
draft
policy
are
a
sunset
clause
on
discounts
that
can
be
offered
by
e
commerce
firms
and
restrictions
on
sellers
backed
by
marketplace
operators.
The
aim
may
be
to
prevent
large
players
from
pricing
out
the
competition
through
unfair
practices,
but
taken
too
far
such
licensing
and
price
controls
can
depress
the
sector.
To
give
the
government
a
say
on
who
can
offer
how
much
discount
and
for
how
long,
instead
of
letting
consumers
exercise
informed
choices,
would
be
a
regressive
step
for
the
economy.
Foreign
direct
investment
restrictions
on
players
who
can
hold
their
own
inventory
are
sought
to
be
lifted,
but
there
must
be
a
majority
Indian
partner
and
all
products
have
to
be
made
in
India.
This
seems
like
a
leaf
out
of
India's
retail
FDI
policy
that
has
similar
procurement
diktats
that
are
not
easy
to
meet
or
monitor.
E
tailer
costs
are
also
likely
to
rise
on
account
of
proposed
norms
on
storing
and
processing
data
locally,
while
consumers
and
firms
could
both
question
the
plan
to
stipulate
payments
via
Rupay
cards.
The
proposed
e
commerce
policy
could
drive
away
those
planning
online
retail
forays
—
and
the
opportunity
to