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House panel seeks regulator for FDI in multi-brand retail

Cautioning that the entry of foreign retail giants could create unemployment, a Parliamentary panel on Tuesday asked the government to set up a 'retail regulatory authority' to deal with issues concerning foreign multi-brand retail companies in the country.

July 23, 2013 / 22:33 IST
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Cautioning that the entry of foreign retail giants could create  unemployment, a Parliamentary panel on Tuesday asked  the government to set up a 'retail regulatory authority' to deal with issues concerning foreign multi-brand retail  companies in the country.


"We have recommended a regulatory authority to look into the problem (impact of FDI in multi-brand retail on MSMEs),"  Tiruchi Siva, DMK leader and chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Industry, said.
According to Siva, if multi-brand retail chains are not regulated well, it will impact medium, small and micro enterprises (MSMEs), farmers and domestic mandis. Also Read: Cannot meet 30% sourcing clause: Walmart to Indian govt
"Once the mandis are eliminated, the big foreign retail giants will manipulate prices and our farmers will be forced to sell their products at low prices dictated by them (foreign retailers), the panel said in a report. "Our own  squeezed-out retailers and all those associated with the market and retail trade would lose their livelihood and  become jobless. It will add to our already existing social and economic woes, which generate so much unrest and  violence."
Siva was of the view that multi-brand chains should be regulated so that customers are not fleeced and farmers are not under-paid for their produce.
Taking serious note of the implementation of sourcing norms, the committee suggested the 30-percent procurement  requirement should be applicable item-wise.
While allowing 51-percent FDI in multi-brand retailing, the government made it mandatory for at least 30 percent of  the value of manufactured or processed products to be sourced from small industries.
The panel also suggested the MSME ministry should commission a survey to assess the benefit and losses of previous FDI policies on the MSME sector to ascertain if they have created any back-end infrastructure, imparted skills to domestic manpower or upgraded managerial skills, as is being envisaged in the current FDI policy.
first published: Jul 23, 2013 07:29 pm

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