Hindustan Times (Noida)

Centre may roll out e-com policy without data norms

- Asit Ranjan Mishra asit.m@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: The commerce ministry will proceed with the proposed e-commerce policy without waiting for the personal data protection bill to be passed in Parliament, a top ministry official said.

The policy will also stay clear of the controvers­ial data localizati­on rules, as these will be separately handled by the Reserve Bank of India and the upcoming bill pending before Parliament.

An earlier version of the draft e-commerce policy leaked in 2008, which had proposed to include data rules, was junked after stiff opposition from the industry. A recent version accessed by Mint in March this year showed the commerce ministry intends to bring in regulation­s that would prevent the formation of digital monopolies and facilitate e-commerce exports.

The latest version is expected to focus on regulatory aspects of e-commerce, including foreign direct investment policy and a possible local regulator for the sector, and may also clarify India’s internatio­nal position on e-commerce negotiatio­ns.

“We are not waiting for the data protection bill to be passed, but data issues will be handled by the proposed law. We will just mention that e-commerce companies need to adhere to the data protection law as well as data localizati­on regulation­s by the Reserve Bank of India,” the official cited above said on the condition of anonymity.

A query sent to the commerce ministry remained unanswered till press time.

The proposed e-commerce policy is different from the draft rules for e-commerce marketplac­es recently notified by the consumer affairs ministry under consumer protection laws.

These rules came after small businesses complained that online marketplac­es were misusing market dominance and resorting to deep discountin­g. Among others, the rules propose to limit so-called ‘flash sales’ of goods and services by e-commerce companies by proposing to ban back-to-back sales that limit customer choice, increase prices and prevents a level playing field. Trade minister Piyush Goyal who is also in charge of the consumer affairs ministry had said last month that the e-commerce policy will be unveiled only after the draft e-commerce rules are finalized.

A joint parliament­ary committee is currently studying the proposed personal data protection bill. Five new members recently joined the committee after several previous members, including chairperso­n Meenakshi Lekhi, left to join the Union cabinet.

A 10-member expert group headed by former Supreme Court judge B.N. Srikrishna, which submitted the draft Personal Data Protection Bill, 2018, recommende­d setting up a data protection authority and placing restrictio­ns on cross-border data flows.

 ??  ?? The policy will also stay clear of the data localizati­on rules.
The policy will also stay clear of the data localizati­on rules.

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