New e-commerce policy likely to be introduced in FY20

Guru Prasad Mohapatra, Secretary, DPIIT said that while there isn’t a definite timeline, the government is targeting to bring the e-commerce policy in the current fiscal.
New e-commerce policy likely to be introduced in FY20
New e-commerce policy likely to be introduced in FY20
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Government may bring the e-commerce policy in the current fiscal though no timeline can be given, a senior official has said. "The draft of e-commerce bill is out. We have just started stakeholder consultations. Many including Nasscom, CII have already given their feedback. We are trying to bring it early since it is a very important policy, Guru Prasad Mohapatra, Secretary Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade told IANS.

We are talking about commercial data here. There is a large amount of e-commerce data. I cannot give a timeline, but we will target to bring it in the current fiscal, he added.

He was in Goa for the second edition of India Start up Summit, an initiative of the DPIIT. Mohapatra said the Data Privacy Bill of IT ministry is about privacy issues of personal data.

Recently IT ministry moved the data privacy bill in the union cabinet, which was approved, where privacy of personal data has so far been included. While the personal data of customers is protected by privacy laws across the world and also in the Indian Bill, non-personal data (NPD) remains largely unregulated.

NPD includes anonymised data like e-commerce data, climate trends collected by a weather app, or commuter patterns gathered by a cab aggregator, eating pattern of a particular region.

Mohapatra said that the IT Ministry had formed a separate committee on data localisation on anonymous data and it involved free flow, cross border issues as well.

E-commerce is tricky to regulate as it touches several domains such as IT, retail, payments and consumers. The DPIIT believes that localisation of e-commerce data in the country and making it accessible to Indian startups would greatly benefit local innovation. The draft e-commerce policy released by the government in February had previously sought to limit cross-border flow of data.

Multiple ministries are at work on their own e-commerce rules. However, the IT Ministry and the consumer affairs ministry have started parallel consultations to frame their own rules to regulate e-commerce companies.

While MeitY or IT Ministry has set up a panel to regulate non-personal data, the consumer affairs ministry has floated draft guidelines for consumer protection. These make up a significant portion of the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade's draft national e-commerce policy. But the umbrella e-commerce policy will be unveiled by the DPIIT.

In February, the government had released a new draft e-commerce policy that provided for regulating cross-border data flows and setting up storage facilities locally. The draft policy sought to disallow sensitive data collected and processed locally but stored abroad from being shared with any third party, even with the consent of the customer.

As for the FDI rules in e-commerce, India had issued a notification in December 2018, which barred online marketplaces with foreign investments from selling products of the companies where they held stakes or controlled inventory, and also banned exclusive marketing arrangements, among others.

The government, however, stated that the notification was only a reiteration of existing rules and it was forced to clarify as it had received complaints that the e-commerce players were giving discounts on products sold on their platforms, thus, violating the FDI rules.

(Anjana Das can be contacted at anjana.d@ians.in)

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