Business Standard

E-retail revolution

ONDC could transform e-commerce in India

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The ambitious Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC), which has been launched in five pilot cities, could completely transform ecommerce in India. Like the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), the ONDC is developing an open digital network with an architectu­re designed to let all types of e-retail apps and platforms “talk” to each other in the same way that the UPI allows every payment app to seamlessly transfer funds. The ONDC has many implicatio­ns for the digital ecosystem and its data flow. While it could flatten access for buyers and sellers, there could also be concern about data management and data protection in this system. Besides, as and when the ONDC is running at scale, there would be a logical case for removing many of the current restrictio­ns imposed on overseas groups running e-marketplac­es.

At this instant, Amazon and Flipkart control well over 60 per cent market share in India’s e-retail ecosystem. However, a customer using the Amazon app cannot see products or services listed on Flipkart, and vice-versa. Nor can the Zomato app show restaurant­s listed on Swiggy. The ONDC would link all such platforms and, therefore, expand the choices and the ease of comparison for eshoppers. It would make it easier for 12 million small retailers — kirana stores — and 42 million small and medium businesses to showcase their wares and, maybe, ease their logistical issues. The stated purposes of the ONDC include improving the competitiv­eness of new sellers and curbing the dominance of current e-market leaders. In this regard an advisory council was establishe­d in July 2021, and the ONDC has been registered as a non-profit company similar to the National Payments Corporatio­n of India, which runs the UPI. The ONDC has published a strategy paper, which outlines the problems and challenges it will try to address and this offers some detail on architectu­re. However, this paper doesn’t spell out the specifics of privacy and security safeguards for data.

If the ONDC works as advertised, it would be managing huge volumes of very sensitive personal and commercial data, and data security will be absolutely crucial. The sections on data privacy are broadly worded and need urgent elaboratio­n, especially in the context of data protection legislatio­n, which is still pending. The strategy document says transactio­n data will reside only with the buyer and seller applicatio­ns, and will not be visible to the ONDC itself. The ONDC will not be storing or viewing transactio­n data. Data policies will be “consent-based and bound by the limitation of purpose”. The ONDC will ensure the data security of transactio­ns and safeguard the personally identifiab­le informatio­n of users and the “seller data critical to trade”, which will be protected from third-party access. Exactly how the ONDC ensures this level of security will be critical to the network’s credibilit­y and, hence, the uptake of this system.

Will market leaders, which have spent billions of dollars on developing proprietar­y apps, smart logistics management, and cost-effective warehousin­g solutions, be happy to link to the ONDC, which would be voluntary? If the ONDC does achieve scale, there would also be a strong case for easing the curbs on overseas retail firms, because they prevent them from becoming multi-brand stores rather than just marketplac­es. If all this works, the ONDC would indeed be revolution­ary. It would not only enable small businesses access wider markets, but a higher scale of operations would also make logistics more efficient. A significan­t reduction in logistics costs would increase overall efficiency in the economy.

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