Foreign e-tailers must have registered entity in country: Draft policy

IANS  |  New Delhi 

sites or apps available for download in must have a registered entity in the country, according to latest draft policy, which also proposes regulation of cross-border flow of data collected by sector players in

These include Chinese portals such as Shein, and and the proposed registration norms come after complaints made to the government by traders' bodies like the about Chinese shipping to Indian customers as gifts in order to avoid customs duty.

As per the proposed norms, all foreign must have a registered entity in India as the importer on record or as the entity through which all sales in India are transacted.

The draft policy has also proposed a ban on all parcels designated as gifts, with the exception of life-saving drugs.

Moreover, as per the draft policy, all data collected by in India and stored abroad should not be made available to other entities outside the country, for any purpose, even with customer consent.

However, the government will have the right to access the data of Indian consumers stored abroad.

Restrictions on cross-border flows of data would not apply to data which is not collected in India, business-to-business (B2B) data sent to India as part of a commercial contract between a business entity located outside India and an Indian business entity.

Software and involving technology-related data flows, which have no personal or community implications and multi-national companies, moving data across borders, which is largely internal to the company and its ecosystem, would not have to follow the regulations.

New foreign direct investment (FDI) norms, which prohibit the from selling products of companies in which they have stakes, came into effect on February 1 despite both and seeking a six-month delay in their implementation.

The second has been welcomed by sector players like and associations such as the Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT).

said the draft policy's rejection of inventory based e-commerce must be followed by effective implementation of FDI norms to ensure marketplaces do not own or control inventory, directly or indirectly.

"The recognition of data as a strategic national asset is well-timed and will lead to the development of required regulation in this regard," a spokesperson said.

US giants and Walmart, which recently acquired a 77 per cent majority stake in the Indian Flipkart, said they are reviewing the and will share their inputs on the proposals in course of time.

has been forced to remove an array of products from its India website in order to comply with the new FDI regulations in e-commerce.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, February 25 2019. 21:38 IST