The National - News

PRICE TO BE PAID FOR INDIA’S ONLINE PROTECTION­ISM

▶ New rules may mean Amazon and Walmart cannot offer big discounts to Indian online consumers

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India’s new rules for foreign e-commerce platforms may be designed to protect local companies from Amazon. com and Walmart, but consumers are likely to suffer the collateral damage.

Online marketplac­es must treat all vendors equally by providing the same terms, India’s trade ministry said last week. In practice, this means barring e-commerce companies from forcing a seller to feature products exclusivel­y on their platforms, and limiting ownership or control over the marketplac­e’s inventory. The government says the changes will promote fair trade and curb foreign companies’ influence in setting domestic prices.

This could mean that platforms offered by e-commerce giants such as Amazon and Walmart’s Flipkart may be prohibited from offering their own goods – such as the Echo smart speaker – at heavy discounts, while allowing rivals the opportunit­y to sell previously proprietar­y products.

“Consumers in India will most likely bear the brunt of these changes and be negatively impacted,” said Jennifer Bartashus, a retail industry analyst for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

“Prices will go up as discounts evaporate, and product options and availabili­ty may contract as e-commerce marketplac­es strive to remain compliant with the new rules.”

The rules could be a blow for Amazon and Walmart, which are attempting to crack India’s consumer market and capture its growth potential. Amazon lost an estimated $3 billion on its internatio­nal efforts in 2017, and analysts believe most of that was in India.

Walmart in May spent $16bn to acquire Amazon’s primary rival in India, online retailer Flipkart. China’s Alibaba has a stake in the country’s largest online grocer, BigBasket, and an investment in popular online retailer Paytm E-commerce.

India’s regulation means that foreign investors are prohibited from running online platforms directly, barring them from selling anything other than food directly to consumers.

Overseas investors have circumnavi­gated this rule by investing in joint ventures with local businesses, and everything on the Amazon marketplac­e is listed by an independen­t seller.

The new rules are an attempt to stop foreign companies from using the existing loophole. Foreign investors that have an equity stake in a platform will also not be permitted to sell their products on it.

The new rules, effective from February 1, could help Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party win the support of local traders – a key voting bloc for the party that suffered defeats in provincial elections last month.

The south Asian nation is key to global retailers as it has a billion-plus population, but only a few million of them own smartphone­s, offering them the opportunit­y of exponentia­l growth in online consumptio­n.

“It’s a big achievemen­t after a long struggle,” said Praveen Khandelwal, secretary general of the Confederat­ion of All India Traders.

“If it is implemente­d in the proper spirit, malpractic­es and predatory pricing policy and deep discountin­g of e-commerce players will be a matter of past.”

Walmart’s Flipkart unit said e-commerce has the potential to create millions of jobs for India and any policy changes will have “long-term implicatio­ns in the evolution of the promising sector”.

“It is important that a broad market-driven framework be developed through a consultati­ve process in order to drive the industry forward,” Flipkart said.

B C Bhartia, president of the Confederat­ion of All India Traders, said earnings for some small businesses had more than halved in the past few years as they struggle to compete with low prices offered by the American-controlled behemoths. He said the rule-tightening would not be enough to help.

“The last-minute policy change is too little and too late,” he said.

In particular, retailers and traders believe Mr Modi turned a blind eye to what they say was the use of policy loopholes by major e-commerce companies to offer heavy discounts that allowed them to seize market share for goods such as electronic items.

Asked about those accusation­s, Amazon India said it had always operated “in compliance with the laws of the land” and that had more than 400,000 small and medium businesses on its marketplac­e.

Small Indian businesses have also been bruised by other Modi policies, including a sudden ban on the use of high-value currency notes in late 2016 and the launch of a national sales tax in 2017, both of which raised compliance costs, Reuters said.

Mr Bhartia said if the government was serious about the concerns of small traders, it should prosecute violators of trade rules and appoint an independen­t regulator to curb malpractic­e.

A government official said last week the administra­tion could consider demands for a regulator in its new e-commerce policy, expected to be released in the coming months.

A September report by

Pricewater­houseCoope­rs estimated online commerce in India would grow 25 percent a year for next five years, hitting $100 billion a year by 2022.

The new curbs could harm those growth prospects and discourage some foreign investors, said investment consultant­s.

“Sentiment is definitely hurt,” said Harminder Sahni of retail consultant Wazir Advisors, adding that the policy suggested online retail business should only be done by Indians.

The new rules will create uncertaint­y for Flipkart as the company evaluates any strategy changes, Ms Bartashus said. If foreign players’ ability to offer products at discounted prices is hindered, that could impact sales and profitabil­ity, she said.

Amazon said it was evaluating the new guidelines to engage as necessary with the government so it could remain true to its vision of “transformi­ng how India buys and sells and generating significan­t direct and indirect employment”.

Flipkart said the advent of the e-commerce industry “was set to be a major growth driver for the Indian economy and create millions of jobs in the future”.

“It is important that a broad market-driven framework through the right consultati­ve process be put in place in order to drive the industry forward,” it added.

The government boasts of attracting nearly $223 billion foreign investment in the last four years, compared with about $152bn in the previous four years.

In its own bid to grow presence in India, Apple is said to be about to start assembling its top-end iPhones in India through the local unit of Foxconn as early as this year, the first time the Taiwanese contract manufactur­er will have made the product in the country, according to a source last week.

Importantl­y, Foxconn will be assembling the most expensive models, such as devices in the flagship iPhone X family, the source said, potentiall­y taking Apple’s business in India to a new level. The work will take place at Foxconn’s plant in Sriperumbu­dur town in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, said the source.

Foxconn, which already makes phones for Xiaomi in India, will invest 25 billion Indian rupees (Dh1.31bn) to expand the plant, including investment in iPhone production, Tamil Nadu’s Industries Minister M C Sampath said.

The investment may create as many as 25,000 jobs, he added.

Ivan Feinseth, an analyst at Tigress Financial Partners, said that the new e-commerce rules are politicall­y motivated and will create higher prices for Indian consumers.

The impact is likely to be less for big e-commerce players such as Amazon and Flipkart, meanwhile, since they already offer products from local merchants and will be able to operate with little or no profits for a while in a bid to gain market share.

“This is overall bad for the consumer, but it has been good for the current Prime Minister Narendra Modi,” Mr Feinseth said. “The local vendors cannot compete on the scale.”

 ?? AFP ?? A deal last year between Flipkart and Walmart stirred anger among Indians. Discounts offered by big e-commerce firms may evaporate under new rules
AFP A deal last year between Flipkart and Walmart stirred anger among Indians. Discounts offered by big e-commerce firms may evaporate under new rules
 ?? Foreign investors can’t run online platforms directly. This bars them from selling anything other than food ??
Foreign investors can’t run online platforms directly. This bars them from selling anything other than food
 ??  ??

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