US makes last-ditch effort in urging India to go easy on data localisation

Global tech companies including Mastercard, Visa and American Express have been lobbying India's finance ministry

Aditya Kalra | Reuters  |  New Delhi 

Two US senators have called on Prime Minister to soften India’s stance on data localisation, warning that measures requiring it represent “key trade barriers” between the two nations.

In a letter sent to Modi on Friday and seen by Reuters, US Senators and — co-chairs of the Senate’s India caucus that comprises over 30 senators — urged India to instead adopt a “light-touch” regulatory framework that would allow data to flow freely across borders.

The letter comes as relations between and New Delhi are strained over multiple issues, including an Indo-Russian defence contract, India’s new tariffs on and other items, and its moves to buy oil from Iran despite upcoming US sanctions.

The letter is most likely a last-ditch effort after the RBI told officials at top payment firms this week that the central would implement, in full, its directive without extending the deadline, or allowing data to be stored both offshore as well as locally — a practice known as data mirroring.

“We see this (data localisation) as a fundamental issue to the further development of digital trade and one that is crucial to our economic partnership,” the US senators said in the letter.

Last-ditch effort

  • The co-chairs of the Senate’s India caucus urge India to adopt a policy that would allow data to flow freely across borders
  • Dennis Shea, US ambassador to the WTO, says the US wants to prohibit data localisation
  • RBI has refused to extend the deadline

These measures have unnerved some tech companies, which fear it will increase their infrastructure costs, hit their global fraud detection analytic platforms and affect planned investments in India at a time when more and more Indians are going online and using digital payments.

US lobby groups, which represent companies such as Facebook Inc, and Inc-owned Google, have also voiced concerns about the proposals.

Shamika Ravi, a member of Modi’s economic advisory council, had earlier told Reuters that the moves were in the “long-term strategic and economic interest” of the country.

The senators added that any concerns related to “protection and security” as well as access to data for lawful purposes were possible without restrictions on physical location, according to the letter.

Government sources have previously told Reuters though, that stringent measures were essential for gaining easier access to data during investigations.

The measures in India come at a time when countries around the world are announcing stringent rules to regulate how firms store data and protect privacy, in the aftermath of Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal.

Meanwhile, according to agency PTI, a senior official said the US wants to prohibit data localisation to ensure that there is a free flow of information across borders.

“We want to have prohibitions on data localisation to ensure that there's free flow of information, free flow of data across borders, disciplines around countries, requiring companies to give up their source code, permanent ban on taxation or duties on digital transmissions,” Dennis Shea, deputy US trade representative and US ambassador to the WTO, told a audience on Friday. “And by the way, and India want to rethink the current moratorium on those duties," Shea said.

First Published: Sat, October 13 2018. 15:28 IST