Instead of a jail term, celebrities endorsing misleading ads will have to pay penalty of up to Rs 5 million and serve a ban of up to three years once the new Consumer Protection Bill is cleared by Parliament.
The Consumer Protection Bill, 2018, was introduced by Consumer Affairs Minister Ram Vilas Paswan in the Lok Sabha and it seeks to replace the 31-year-old law.
One of the major objectives of the Bill is to crack down on misleading advertisements.
If the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA), proposed to be set up under the Bill, is satisfied that an advertisement is false or misleading, it may issue directions to endorsers, advertiser, publisher as well traders and manufacturers to discontinue or modify such an ad.
The CCPA will have the powers to impose a penalty of up to Rs 1 million on endorsers and manufacturers. For a subsequent violation, the penalty will be of up to Rs 5 million.
The authority will also have the power ban endorser of false or misleading ads from making an endorsement of any product or service for a period of one year, while subsequent violation will attract a ban of up to three years.
“No endorser shall be liable to a penalty if he has exercised due diligence to verify the veracity of the claims made in the advertisement regarding the product or service being endorsed by him,” the bill said.
The Parliamentary Standing Committee that vetted the Consumer Protection Bill, 2015, had suggested stringent penalty and jail term for endorsers of misleading ads.
However, the government did not accept the recommendation of jail term and has instead proposed ban of up to three years.
In case of those publishing misleading ads, the Bill empowers CCPA to impose a penalty of up to Rs 1 million.
However, no penalty will be slapped if publishers prove that the ad was published in the ordinary course of their business.
“No defence shall be available to such person if he had previous knowledge of the order passed by the CCPA for withdrawal of or modification of such advertisement,” the Bill said.
Since the parliamentary panel had made many recommendations, the consumer affairs ministry decided to withdraw the 2015 bill and introduced a fresh one.