Hindustan Times (Delhi)

E-commerce

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Key reasons for putting a comprehens­ive e-commerce policy in place include regulation of access to data that is one of the main elements for the success of an enterprise in the digital economy; protection of consumers ; promotion of domestic manufactur­ers; to check the misuse of dominant position by local or global online retailers; and provision of a legal framework , the first official added.

The e-commerce policy should be aligned with the data protection law, particular­ly for personally identifiab­le data, said Arun Prabhu , a partner at law firm Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas. A draft policy gave a refer- ence to data as the oil of the digital economy and, in 2018, proposed a requiremen­t for hard localisati­on whereby all data generated by users from various sources including e-commerce platforms, social media and search engines had to be stored only in India, he said. A draft of the Data Protection Bill, 2018, however, proposed hard localisati­on only for critical personal informatio­n, something that is yet to be defined, he said.

To protect the interests of domestic retailers, the government recently restricted foreign e-commerce marketplac­es from selling products of companies in which they had a stake and prohibited them from forging any exclusive arrangemen­t with vendors.

While the move was welcomed by about 70 million domestic traders and small shopkeeper­s, it invited severe criticisms from global investors and multinatio­nal companies.

The Swadeshi Jagaran Manch (SJM), an economic affiliate of the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh (RSS), is confident that the government will not succumb to internatio­nal pressure. “I have faith that the government will protect the interests of the 7 crore domestic traders. I can say this about the BJP government with some confidence,” said Ashwani Mahajan, national co-convener of the SJM. The BJP is the political offshoot of the RSS.

Mahajan said the proposed e-commerce policy cannot contradict the foreign direct investment (FDI) policy on online trade, which was recently clarified and enforced from February 1. “Take it from me -- no government can make any policy which is good for a few and detrimenta­l for the masses. If this happens, there will be severe political repercussi­ons, whether election or no election.”

Confederat­ion of All India Traders (CAIT) national secretary general Praveen Khandelwal said: “The proposed e-commerce policy is in the favour of 7 crore (70 million) local traders and 30 crore (300 million) people whose livelihood is dependent on that. We are expecting the government to announce it (e-commerce policy) before February 25.”

EY India partner and national leader, e-commerce and consumer internet, Ankur Pahwa said, “Data privacy is an important global subject that all companies need to consider seriously and stringentl­y comply with”.

“Considerin­g the vast user data available with various e-commerce companies ranging from financial to health, personal preference­s etc., it is important that there are regulation­s in place to maintain checks and balances. Aspects such as storage of user data to be maintained in India, national encryption policy, centralise­d e-commerce regulator, two-factor authentica­tion for payments, Internet of Things (IOT) regulation­s, restrictio­n on data portabilit­y, data sharing are critical aspects under discussion in the policy,” he added.

Some of these aspects will have an impact e-commerce companies, given the data storage infrastruc­ture is not very well developed in India and may turn out to be an expensive exercise to carry out, he said.

Another important aspect under considerat­ion is providing the government access to user data; the data protection bill will define the extent to which the state can use data without consent (of users). This issue continues to be a red flag for privacy advocates, he added.

The process of framing an e-commerce policy started in 2013-14 through a discussion paper prepared by the erstwhile Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion, now renamed the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal trade.

Later, a think tank was constitute­d on the ‘Framework for National Policy on e-commerce’ by the department of commerce for preparing recommenda­tions for India’s national policy on e-commerce. The first meeting of the think tank was held on April 24, 2018. Based on its recommenda­tions, the department of commerce formulated a draft policy document, “Electronic Commerce in India: Draft National Policy Framework,” after consulting various stakeholde­rs in July last year.

Minister of state for commerce and industry CR Chaudhary told the Lok Sabha on December 24 that the Economic Survey 2017-18 estimated the e-commerce market in India at $33 billion.

THE GOVT RECENTLY RESTRICTED FOREIGN E-COMMERCE MARKETPLAC­ES FROM SELLING PRODUCTS OF COMPANIES IN WHICH THEY HAD A STAKE AND PROHIBITED THEM FROM FORGING ANY EXCLUSIVE ARRANGEMEN­T WITH VENDORS

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