close

Easy documentation, role of post offices to boost e-commerce exports

Steps such as increasing awareness, easier documentation, simplified customs processes and standard operating practice for product returns would help in promoting exports through e-commerce medium

Press Trust of India New Delhi
Exports, global exports, supply chain

Photo: Bloomberg

Listen to This Article

Steps such as increasing awareness, easier documentation, simplified customs processes and standard operating practice for product returns would help in promoting the country's exports through e-commerce medium, according to a report by industry body FISME.

The other measures which would help the sector include lowering charges for Export Data Processing and Monitoring System (EDPMS); easier reconciliation of remittances for export receipts from abroad through a reassessment of the current 25 per cent variation between exports and payments; and raising the 9-month limit on receiving payments for exports for e-commerce.

Over 90 per cent of e-commerce exporters in India are MSMEs (most of them micro and small enterprises) and, therefore, a strategy for e-commerce exports must focus on MSMEs spread across the nation to sell their products to global markets, FISME said.

The FISME and IKDHVAJ Advisers LLP report has flagged a number of issues that need to be looked upon to promote exports through e-commerce medium.

At present, product returns are in general treated as imports (primarily because of problems in identifying the returned product as the originally exported product) and thus subject to full import duties, the report said, adding in many cases, the logistics costs of bringing returns back to India are very high and the products are either sold at a huge discount in the country exported to or discarded.

The process of e-commerce exports through courier services below a particular threshold also results in an inability to claim benefits for exports available to offline exports, it said.

Also Read

India should target $350 bn exports through e-commerce by 2030: GTRI

ONDC to support small retailers against large tech-based e-com firms: Goyal

India unveils 'dynamic' foreign trade policy, eyes $2 trn exports by 2030

Traders demand rollout of robust e-com policy, formation of regulator

Flipkart joins Polygon to launch Metaverse use cases in e-commerce space

Hiring in startups up in April, despite 6% annual drop in e-recruitment

Undeterred by price hike, liquor sales at nearly 400 mn cases in FY23

Vivek Agnihotri sends notice to Mamata over her 'Kashmir Files' comments

Live streaming of proceedings takes court to homes of common citizens: SC

K'taka polls: Pawar questions Chavan's stature in Cong after he targets NCP

It added that logistics issues related to courier/customs procedures, the limited number of foreign post offices, and the difficulty in tracking the last mile delivery are also problems more specific to e-commerce exports.

The report has suggested a tripartite awareness raising campaign involving industry and SME associations such as FISME, government and platform owners to facilitate information on end-to-end e-commerce export process.

It asked for a green channel for e-commerce exports with easier documentation and customs process simplification for timely delivery; and special facilitative mechanisms on cross-border payments especially with respect to closure procedure at banks.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: May 09 2023 | 3:53 PM IST

Explore News