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Big e-commerce players must follow the law of the land

New rules for online marketplaces seek to level the playing field and protect the interest of consumers 

July 06, 2021 / 15:18 IST
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Consumer is king. That’s the classical view. The reality of the modern world, however, has long pushed the consumer to a mere pawn. In a system that consistently seeks to embrace technology, his predicament is precarious, to say the least.

That’s because relationships in the entire chain from producer to consumer have gone completely impersonal. The net result is that we have created a new disadvantaged class. More often than not, this unsuspecting class has innocently followed the proverbial Pied Piper.

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The government has, time and again, stepped in to insulate this class from exploitation. But its latest effort has taken many giants in the e-commerce space totally off-guard. Pushed on the back foot, heavyweights such as Amazon and even home-grown Tata group are complaining that the new rules will hit them hard.

They are particularly upset over a few proposals that could well nigh force them to reconfigure their entire business model. The government has insisted that the new proposals are aimed at protecting hapless consumers and that e-commerce rules in other countries are stricter than in India.

What are these new rules? Among other things, they envisage


E-commerce entities are marketplaces. In a physical marketplace, buyers and sellers congregate to do transactions. In e-commerce, it happens in a virtual space. Simply put, these e-commerce marketplaces such as Amazon, Flipkart and others are facilitators enabling buying and selling. In reality, however, they go beyond the role of facilitator and stray into the domain of selling. Of course, they do it in a myriad indirect ways.