Business Standard

E-commerce policy to tackle data, tax issues

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

The government has announced that a framework for an e-commerce policy will be prepared within the next six months.

The comprehens­ive policy is expected to focus on all aspects of the e-commerce business and consumers. It will encompass data privacy and taxation, apart from a host of technical aspects such as technology transfer, server localisati­on and connectivi­ty issues.

Commerce Secretary Rita Teaotia said on Tuesday that a large number of ministries, key industry players and several regulators, including the Competitio­n Commission of India and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, would be involved in drafting the policy. The think tank tasked with drafting the policy held its first meeting on Tuesday.

On the issue of a potential regulator for the sector, Teaotia said it would depend on whether the policy needed legislativ­e requiremen­ts and new regulation­s or existing laws sufficed.

A task force will now be constitute­d and is expected to submit recommenda­tions to the e-commerce think tank within five months. The think tank, in turn, will tentativel­y have a month to finalise the framework.

Major e-commerce companies such as emarketpla­ces Flipkart and Snapdeal, e-wallet major Paytm and service provider MakeMyTrip were out in full force on Tuesday at the stakeholde­r consultati­on meet. Apart from data privacy, most firms were vocal about taxation and allegation­s made against them by brick-and-mortar retailers on the issue of excessive discounts being offered.

“The discussion has been quite straightfo­rward that no discountin­g is allowed and the fact that no inventory ownership, directly or indirectly, is allowed by online marketplac­es. However, there is obviously a lot of concern about whether this is being effectivel­y implemente­d or not, and if not, what is going to be done about it,” Kunal Bahl, Snapdeal chief executive officer, said.

The policy is expected to focus on all aspects of the e-commerce business and consumers

A senior commerce ministry official said that an e-commerce policy may not go hand in hand with India’s arguments on e-commerce at the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO). Over the past two years, developed nations have continuous­ly pushed for a proposed set of global rules on e-commerce. India has argued that the move would sideline discussion­s on food security and other developmen­t-based issues important to developing nations. But the domestic e-commerce industry has also remained cold to the proposal, fearing that the new rules could provide a pretext for unfair mandatory market access to foreign companies. “Because this is a WTOled agenda, our suggestion has been that the access provided to India’s data, platform and markets should be reciprocal. In a way, India’s open market is a big advantage to global companies but the same might not be true for domestic ones,” Paytm chief Vijay Shekhar Sharma said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India