Business Standard

Retail policy proposal back to consumer affairs dept

Commerce and industry ministry again writes to the department, asking it to formulate the policy

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y & SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

The commerce and industry ministry has again written to the consumer affairs department, asking it to formulate the proposed national retail trade policy. SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y and SANJEEB MUKHERJEE write

The commerce and industry ministry has again written to the consumer affairs department, asking it to formulate the proposed national retail trade policy.

In April, the ministry had written to the consumer affairs department, which is currently the nodal government agency for regulating internal trade, to look into the possibilit­y of creating a such a policy.

The policy aims to create more formalisat­ion in retail and fix norms on minimum wages of workers as well as operating hours.

The ministry had suggested creating a task force, with members drawn from industry and government.

But a few weeks later, the department had replied, saying that as the Shops and Establishm­ents Act was statelevel legislatio­n, it could not do much about it.

Also, the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distributi­on has framed a Bill to amend the Consumer Protection Act, which will take care of many of the problems consumers face.

The department in a letter also said though internal trade fell in its domain, it would want the commerce and industry ministry to frame the guidelines.

However, the commerce and industry ministry replied to it.

“Now we have again asked the consumer affairs department to look into the matter because it has more expertise in dealing with internal trade. The policy is expected to have widespread legal and financial implicatio­ns for India, which has the highest shop density in the world, with 11 shops per 1,000 persons, far ahead of other nations,” a senior ministry official said.

He hinted ministry officials were not too keen on taking up the responsibi­lity of preparing yet another crucial sectoral policy.

The ministry is busy preparing the industrial and the e- commerce policies, whose basic drafts are expected to be released to the public soon.

In the meantime, several state government­s have warned they shouldn’t be left out of the deliberati­ons on the matter since retail is still by and large governed by the Shops and Establishm­ents Acts, enacted by state legislatur­es, according to sources.

The ministry began to consider framing the proposed policies after a nudge from the Prime Minister’s office, a senior government official said.

Earlier this year, the Confederat­ion of All India Traders (CAIT) wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, seeking a national policy for retail and a separate ministry for internal trade.

According to the CAIT, the sector provides the highest number of direct and indirect jobs, through an estimated 65 million small businesses, and require structured norms for its regulation and growth.

“It is estimated that domestic trade provides livelihood to about 250 million people in the country and is registerin­g an annual growth rate of about 15 per cent. The share of the organised sector in overall domestic sales is projected to jump from around 5 per cent currently to around 10 per cent to 15 per cent in the next three years,” the CAIT says on its website.

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