Besides that, a former IAS officer hired to spearhead the initiative quit last week after differences with the founders four months into the job, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
Indiatech was established late last year in the wake of calls by Bansal and Aggarwal for policies to protect homegrown tech companies in 2016.
They urged the government to formulate policies toward this end so that their companies could compete against deep-pocketed global rivals such as Amazon and Uber. Aggarwal had even accused overseas companies of using India as a “capital-dumping ground.”
But as experts point out, Flipkart and Ola are said to be in talks with global giants for investments. ET reported that Flipkart is in advanced negotiations with Walmart Inc. overselling what could potentially be a controlling stake in the e-commerce marketplace to the US retail giant. Ola is said to be in talks with Uber for a merger.
“They sort of have an identity crisis,” said an executive familiar with developments at Indiatech.
“If Walmart buys Flipkart, then it could get disbanded completely,” he said, asking not to be named. He also said that Ola been distancing itself from Indiatech of late. Bansal of Flipkart did not respond to queries. Ola declined to comment.
“Indiatech as an organisation has always been in a conceptual stage, and there has never been a formal launch,” an executive at one of the founding companies said on condition of anonymity.
Another senior executive at one of the companies active in Indiatech said there was “nothing much happening” at the lobby group. “We were not clear in our heads, whether it was the right thing or wrong thing to do to shut out foreign competition--that is why we stayed away,” said the founder of a homegrown tech firm that decided not to be part of the group.