Commerce Ministry asks RBI, ED to probe if top ecommerce firms flouted rules

 The Commerce Ministry has requested the Enforcement Directorate and RBI to examine whether e-commerce majors Flipkart, Amazon and Snapdeal violated FDI rules by engaging in business-to-consumers (B2C) activity.

Commerce Ministry asks RBI, ED to probe if top ecommerce firms flouted rules

New Delhi: The Commerce Ministry has requested the Enforcement Directorate and RBI to examine whether e-commerce majors Flipkart, Amazon and Snapdeal violated FDI rules by engaging in business-to-consumers (B2C) activity.

The move followed a complaint filed by traders' body CAIT which alleged that the e-commerce portals circumvented law and engaged in B2C activity as 100 per cent FDI is allowed in the business-to-business (B2B) segment.

"It's requested that the matter may be examined and appropriate action may be taken," said a letter by the ministry addressed to ED and RBI.

In its complaint, CAIT stated that Amazon, Flipkart and Snapdeal, which recently conducted mega sales, solicited the general public through big advertisement campaign in print, electronic and social media.

"Since they have received foreign investment, they are allowed to undertake B2B e-commerce activity and not B2C. The said advertisements addressed to the public in general tantamount to retail trading," CAIT said in a letter to the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) Secretary Amitabh Kant.

Sources in ED said such cases are already under probe.

A Snapdeal spokesperson said: "Snapdeal is a technology platform that connects sellers with buyers to facilitate transactions. As a pure market place, we serve a rapidly expanding base of sellers, who find value in connecting with a large universe of buyers."

However, there was no response from Amazon and Flipkart.

The CAIT's argument is that since ownership of inventory is not held by the said companies, they can not offer 'sale' or 'discounts' in totality on their online portals. "Doing so establishes that they are not marketplace and as such openly flout FDI policy," it added.

CAIT appealed that the three online retailers should be restricted to conduct such sales and immediate directions may be passed to them for violation of the Consolidated FDI Policy.

According to the Consolidated FDI Policy Circular 2015, e-commerce activity refers to the one of buying and selling by a company through the e-commerce platform. Such companies would engage only in B2B e-commerce and not in retail trading, inter alia implying that existing restrictions on FDI in domestic trading will be applicable to e-commerce as well. 

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