Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Flipkart does not meet the definition of ‘Indianness’

Focus on protecting consumers and providing a level playing field for all. The market will take care of the rest

- R SUKUMAR R Sukumar is editor, Mint n letters@hindustant­imes.com

Achorus is being orchestrat­ed in Indian media and government circles about the need to protect Indian Internet companies from US firms such as Uber Technologi­es Inc and Amazon.com Inc. Nationalis­m is a sure way to get everyone’s attention these days, but policymake­rs in New Delhi are, wisely, not buying into any of the arguments being presented – at least, not so far.

In the past few months, some of the purportedl­y Indian companies seeking protection, including Flipkart Ltd, and ANI Technologi­es Pvt Ltd (which runs Ola), have worked towards forming a lobby group. An executive at a multinatio­nal venture capital firm tells me that a person has been identified to head this body, although no announceme­nt to this effect has been made Ravi Mehta, an executive from one of the investors in Flipkart, Steadview Capital, has been meeting venture capital and private equity firms, policy makers, and journalist­s, seeking to build an argument for protection­ism. I met Mehta in March.

The argument is a persuasive one on the surface: China kept US Internet firms out, and managed to build its own Internet behemoths, and India should do the same; US Internet firms operating in India are dumping capital and using predatory pricing to hurt Indian companies; this is threatenin­g to stifle local innovation. For now, the argument is only about US Internet companies, specifical­ly Uber and Amazon. Other than Alibaba, none of the Chinese companies has a direct presence in India and even Alibaba’s is, at the moment, a small presence. One Chinese Net company Tencent Holdings Ltd, has just bought into Flipkart; another, Didi Chuxing, bought into Ola sometime back.

The problem with the argument for protection­ism is in the definition­s.

Amazon is listed in the US (Flipkart’s largest investor Tiger Global Management has a stake in Amazon, although it reduced this significan­tly last year). Uber is a classic start-up, as yet unlisted. It is funded by venture capital, and some of the limited partners (or investors who put money into funds raised by venture capital and private equity companies) whose money is in it, may also have money in Ola and Flipkart. Indeed, most venture capital firms raise funds overseas. So the cost of capital for investment­s in both Indian and US (or for that matter any) start-ups is pretty much the same.

Indian law has a very clear definition of the “Indianness” of a company. Incorporat­ed in India, and majority owned and controlled by Indians and Indian entities. Flipkart doesn’t meet that definition. Ola may. And, of course, all four companies, Amazon, Uber, Ola and Flipkart, by virtue of operating in India, create jobs for Indians, serve largely Indian customers, and are helping Indian small businesses and entreprene­urs (every driver who owns a cab is one).

Indian law also has a clear definition of predatory pricing, but this comes under the competitio­n policy’s abuse of dominance section. This means that only a market leader can be accused of predatory pricing, or pricing products or services at a price lower than cost and aimed purely at hurting the competitio­n. This is one reason why Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd’s pricing strategy hasn’t fallen afoul of the Competitio­n Commission of India. I think the law need to be amended, but that is a larger issue. Flipkart was offering substantia­l discounts long before Amazon entered India, and all four companies have grown the market (at the expense of traditiona­l companies) by playing the price card. This cry for help by the protection­ist lobby is not very different from a schoolyard bully calling for help from a teacher at the entrance of a more muscular bully. The government should, of course, work to spur local innovation, which is more likely in small product and services companies doing their own thing, not well-funded start-ups built around a core idea that has been ripped off a successful company in another market. And for such companies, a partnershi­p with or an acquisitio­n by a multinatio­nal technology company is desirable.

If the government feels the need to do something at all, it should focus on protecting consumers, ensuring the law of the land is followed, and providing a level playing field for everyone (small and big, Indian and foreign, incumbent and disruptor alike).

The market will take care of the rest.

THIS CRY FOR HELP BY THE PROTECTION­IST LOBBY IS NOT VERY DIFFERENT FROM A SCHOOLYARD BULLY CALLING FOR HELP FROM A TEACHER AT THE ENTRANCE OF A MORE MUSCULAR BULLY

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