Exclusive: U.S. lobby group urges India not to tighten foreign
e-commerce rules
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[January 30, 2021] By
Aditya Kalra
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - A U.S. lobby group
which represents firms including Amazon.com and Walmart has urged India
not to tighten foreign investment rules for e-commerce companies again,
according to a letter seen by Reuters.
India is considering revising the rules after traders in the country
accused Amazon's Indian division and Walmart's Flipkart of creating
complex structures to bypass investment regulations, Reuters reported
this month.
The U.S. companies deny any wrongdoing.
India only allows foreign e-commerce players to operate as a marketplace
to connect buyers and sellers but local traders say the U.S. giants
promote select sellers and offer deep discounts, which hurts business
for smaller local retailers.
In 2018, India changed its foreign direct investment (FDI) rules to
deter foreign firms offering products from sellers in which they have an
equity stake.
The government is now considering tightening those rules again to
include sellers in which a foreign e-commerce firm holds an indirect
stake through its parent, Reuters reported.
Such a change could hurt Amazon as it holds indirect stakes in two of
its biggest online sellers in India, Cloudtail and Appario.
Citing the Reuters story in a Jan. 28 letter, the U.S.-India Business
Council (USIBC), part of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, urged the Indian
government not to make any more material restrictive changes to
e-commerce investment rules.
"Any further changes in FDI rules would limit e-commerce firms from
leveraging their scale," USIBC said in the letter seen by Reuters.
USIBC also asked India's Department for Promotion of Industry and
Internal Trade (DPIIT) to engage in substantive consultation with
companies on e-commerce regulation.
USIBC and DPIIT did not respond to a request for comment.
After the Reuters story was published last week, the Confederation of
All India Traders (CAIT), which represents millions of brick-and-mortar
retailers, said it has received assurances from India's commerce
minister that policy changes were in the offing.
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An employee of Amazon walks through a turnstile gate inside an
Amazon Fulfillment Centre (BLR7) on the outskirts of Bengaluru,
India, September 18, 2018. REUTERS/ Abhishek N. Chinnappa/File Photo
On Saturday, CAIT in a statement said the USIBC letter was an "uncalled for
intervention" which runs against the interest of 85 million traders. "Such a hue
and cry is not understandable," CAIT said, adding that it had also written a
letter in protest to the USIBC President.
The government is also considering prohibiting online sales by a seller who, for
example, purchases goods from an e-commerce entity's wholesale unit, or any of
its group firms, and then sells them on the entity's websites, Reuters has
reported.
The 2018 rule changes soured relations between India and the United States, as
Washington said the policy changes favoured local e-commerce retailers over U.S.
companies.
Industry sources told Reuters on Friday that the prospects of such frequent
policy changes in India have alarmed Amazon, which has committed $6.5 billion in
investments in India, and Walmart, which invested $16 billion in Flipkart in
2018.
The USIBC letter said "investments require reasonable policy predictability and
fair treatment".
"USIBC is concerned that material changes to the FDI policy creates uncertainty
and impacts investor confidence, as well as business continuity of existing
investments," it said.
Amazon declined to comment on the USIBC letter. Walmart and Flipkart did not
respond to requests for comment.
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by Euan Rocha and David Clarke)
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