Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Amazon to invest $1 bn in digitizing small businesses

OLIVE BRANCH Move comes as small sellers accuse company of discrimina­tion

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: Amazon.com Inc chief executive officer Jeff Bezos said his company will invest $1 billion to bring small businesses online in India, reaching out to some of his fiercest critics in a goodwill visit that saw him donning traditiona­l Indian attire and fly a kite with children.

Amazon and Walmart’s Flipkart have been hit with a barrage of criticism from India’s brickand-mortar retailers who accuse the US giants of violating Indian law with deep discounts and discrimina­ting against small sellers by promoting select big ones. The companies deny the allegation­s.

Just this week, the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) launched an anti-trust probe to look into those allegation­s.

Amazon said it will set up digital centres in 100 Indian cities and villages to help businesses get online to sell their goods and will offer support in marketing and logistics.

The investment of $1 billion will help bring more than 10 million Indian businesses online and enable exports of Indiamade goods worth $10 billion by 2025, it added.

Speaking at a company event at a New Delhi stadium which Amazon described as “a first-ofits-kind mega summit” bringing together more than 3,000 small businesses, Bezos praised India and said Amazon was committed to being its long-term partner.

“The dynamism, the energy ... the growth. This country has something special,” Bezos, who wore a blue-coloured traditiona­l Indian jacket, said to the audience which responded with cheers.

Other events in India have i ncluded Bezos paying his respects to a memorial dedicated to Mahatma Gandhi. Sources say he has sought a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other government officials.

The Confederat­ion of All India Traders, a group representi­ng roughly 70 million brick-andmortar retailers, has said it will protest in 300 cities during Bezos’ visit. But protests so far have been small. At one in New Delhi and another in the eastern state of Odisha on Wednesday, there were about 50 demonstrat­ors each.

“We are not able to compete. There is an unhealthy competitio­n,” said Girish Prasad Ratha, a demonstrat­or who said he had lost 15% of his sales in the last two years because customers were increasing­ly going online.

The company maintains it provides opportunit­ies to more than 550,000 sellers on its platform to grow their business in India.

India’s e-commerce market revenues are set to touch $120 billion this year, having grown 51% annually between 2017 and 2020, according to a study by CCI.

Amazon has been pumping in millions of dollars across various operations as it looks to strengthen its position in the fledgling Indian e-commerce market—despite huge losses.

In December last year, it invested over ₹1,700 crore into its payments and wholesale business units in India, while in October it had infused over ₹4,400 crore (more than $600 million) in its various units in India.

Bezos last visited India in 2014 when he presented Amazon’s Indian unit with a giant cheque of $2 billion. Since then, the e-commerce company has pledged a further sum of $3.5 billion. The $1 billion investment announced Wednesday would take the total committed investment to $6.5 billion.

Bezos, who arrived in the country on Tuesday, is due to fly out on Saturday.

PTI contribute­d to this story

 ??  ?? Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos in New Delhi on Wednesday.
PRADEEP GAUR/MINT
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos in New Delhi on Wednesday. PRADEEP GAUR/MINT

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