U.S. lobby group views India's e-commerce plan as worrying, email shows
						
		 
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		 [June 24, 2021]  By 
		Aditya Kalra and Abhirup Roy 
		 
		NEW DELHI (Reuters) - A top lobby group that is part of the 
		U.S. Chamber of Commerce believes India's proposed new e-commerce rules 
		are a cause for concern and will lead to a stringent operating 
		environment for companies, according to an email reviewed by Reuters. 
		 
		India this week spooked online retailers like Amazon and Walmart's 
		Flipkart by outlining plans to limit "flash sales", reining in a private 
		label push and mandating them to have a system to address grievances. 
		 
		The Washington-headquartered U.S.-India Business Council (USIBC), of 
		which Amazon and Walmart are members, described the rules as concerning 
		in an internal email, saying some provisions were in line with New 
		Delhi's stance on other big digital companies. 
		 
		India's draft plan "includes several concerning policies, including 
		significant limits on platforms' ability to organise sales and handle 
		grievances," USIBC said in an email to its members. 
						
		
		  
						
		 
		 
		USIBC has in the past urged India not to tighten a separate set of rules 
		governing foreign investment
		
		https://www. 
		
		reuters.com/business/retail-consumer/ 
		
		exclusive-us-lobby-group-urges- 
		india-not- 
		tighten-foreign-e-commerce 
		-rules-2021-01-30 in companies like Amazon and Flipkart, an issue that 
		has often soured trade relations between India and United States. 
		 
		USIBC did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 
		 
		The new rules - open for consultation until July 6 - are expected to 
		have an impact across the board in an online retail market forecast to 
		be worth $200 billion by 2026. 
						
		
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			 A delivery worker 
			carries an Amazon package to deliver it to a customer at a 
			residential apartment in Ahmedabad, India, March 17, 2021.REUTERS/Amit 
			Dave/File Photo 
            
			  
		They will also apply to Indian firms like Tata's BigBasket and Reliance 
		Industries' JioMart, but the proposal comes after Indian retailers for 
		years complained that market leaders Amazon and Flipkart used complex 
		business structures to bypass India's foreign investment law, hurting 
		small businesses. 
		 
		The companies deny any wrongdoing. 
		 
		India's new proposed rules have raised concerns they will force Amazon 
		and Flipkart to review their business structures, industry sources and 
		lawyers have told Reuters. 
			
The USIBC email noted that India's proposals "preclude (e-commerce) platforms 
from owning vendors". 
 
Amazon specifically holds an indirect stake in two of its top sellers and a 
Reuters investigation 
https://www.reuters.com/ 
investigates/special-report/amazon-india-operation in February cited Amazon 
documents that showed it gave preferential treatment to a small number of its 
sellers. 
 
India's rules also will force e-commerce companies to reveal the country of 
origin of a product and suggest alternatives to ensure a "fair opportunity for 
domestic goods". 
 
Some of the new provisions align with India's similar federal policies "for 
social and digital media companies ... and will result in a more stringent 
e-commerce regime," USIBC said in its email. 
 
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell) 
				 
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