Category: Deccan Herald

Delinking seller from marketplace

In 2020, the Department of Consumer Affairs (DoCA) in the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution had issued the Consumer Protection (e-commerce) Rules under Section 101 of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019. The rules lay down the conditions with which e-commerce firms should comply. Amongst others, these bar affiliated entities from selling on e-commerce platforms and restrict ‘flash sales’ (discounts or promotions they offer for a short duration) and disallow the seller from using the name or brand associated with that of the marketplace e-commerce entity for the promotion of goods. Within a year, the government has proposed certain amendments to these rules in the form of Consumer Protection (e-commerce) (Amendment) Rules, 2021. These amendments include restricting business-to-business, or...
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Electricity reforms shelved

State govts must adopt DBT to give power subsidies, instead of burdening discoms with them     During a review meeting with the bureaucrats of states and UTs and CEOs of power sector CPSUs on December 18, Union Power Minister R K Singh expressed satisfaction over the country becoming power-surplus and increasing the power availability to 22 hours in rural areas and 23.5 hours in urban areas. He opined that “the next step is to take it to 24X7 guaranteed power supply at an affordable price and ensure the viability of power distribution companies (discoms).” The two issues require close examination. A sizeable chunk of electricity is supplied to households and farmers at a fraction of the cost of purchase and distribution, or...
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Farm laws needed to fill a void

There are 265 crops and the MSP guarantee will have to be given to farmers producing all these crops – this will be a disaster.         Farmers celebrate following the announcement of suspension of their year-long protest against farm laws & other related issues, at Singhu border in New Delhi on Thursday. Credit: IANS Photo Following Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s announcement of the repeal of the three contentious farm laws on November 19, protesting farmers lost no time in coming up with a new charter of demands. The most potent of these is a legal guarantee for the minimum support price (MSP). Even as Modi proposed to set up a committee to recommend how MSP can be...
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Policy flaws in fertiliser sector

The unprecedented increase in international prices of complex fertilizers primarily di-ammonium phosphate (DAP) as well as raw materials – phosphoric acid and ammonia used in their production – has sent shock waves through the industry.  At the beginning of the year, when the prices were up 60 per cent to 70 per cent over last years’ level, the government was in deep slumber. Even as the cost of supplying a bag (50 kg) of DAP went up from Rs 1,700 last year to Rs 2,400, it kept the subsidy unchanged at the last years’ level of Rs 500. As a result, its maximum retail price (MRP) increased from Rs 1,200 to Rs 1,900 inviting farmers’ wrath. The Centre responded by...
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Time to reform pricing, subsidy regimes

From October 1, the price of natural gas (NG) on supplies from fields given to Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) and Oil India Ltd (OIL) on a nomination basis, as well as those given under the New Exploration and Licensing Policy (NELP), has been increased from the current $1.79 per million British thermal units (mBtu) to $2.9 per mBtu – up by $1.1 per mBtu. Going further, the price will rise to $5.93 per mBtu from April 2022 and $7.65 per mBtu from October 2022. Under the NG pricing guidelines in vogue since November 2014, this price – known as the administered price mechanism (APM) — is a weighted average of the price prevailing at four international locations — the...
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Privatising power distribution: A hoax

It cannot happen because political parties need discoms to run their populist schemes of subsidised power A major plank of the Electricity (Amendment) Bill (EAB), 2021, is to de-license the electricity distribution business, bring in competition, and give the consumer power to choose her supplier (‘open access’). This is easier said than done. It has to do with the fundamental weakness of State-owned and controlled power distribution companies (discoms), who will come under greater stress if private players also get involved. What makes discoms weak? The states order them to sell electricity to poor households and farmers at a fraction of the cost of purchase and distribution, or even free. On units sold to them, discoms incur huge under-recovery. This...
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Taxing MNCs: G-7 formula is flawed

The agreement reached by the finance ministers of the advanced economies at the G-7 meeting on taxing MNCs stands on two main pillars: one, a global minimum corporate tax (GMCT) rate of 15%, and two, “reaching an equitable solution on the allocation of taxing rights, with market countries awarded taxing rights on at least 20% of profit exceeding a 10% margin for the largest and most profitable multinational enterprises.” Concurrently, efforts are to be made for the removal of all Digital Services Taxes (DST) imposed on these companies by several countries. The move is prompted by MNCs registering in low-tax jurisdictions such as the Netherlands, Ireland and Luxembourg, and showing all their revenues and profits in those jurisdictions regardless of...
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FDI in retail: Clear the maze

The government should legitimise direct selling by foreign companies in Indian retail without any riders In the backdrop of complaints by the Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT) regarding violation of the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) policy by global e-commerce players, Amazon and Walmart-owned-Flipkart etc, the Ministry of Consumer Affairs has proposed a set of new rules called Consumer Protection (e-commerce) Rules, 2020 which the government proposes to implement after factoring in the views of all stakeholders. The rules require all e-commerce entities that are not established in India, but intending to operate here: (i) register with the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) in the Commerce Ministry; (ii) bar affiliated entities from selling on e-commerce platform...
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Fertiliser subsidy policy is skewing crop yields, soil health

A major factor fuelling resentment among farmers is the spiralling prices of fertilisers that are critical in the production of agricultural products. There are two types of fertilisers: Urea— the predominant source of nitrogen or ‘N’ nutrient supply— and phosphate and potash fertilisers— the source of ‘P’ nutrient and ‘K’ nutrient; there are 22 grades of such fertilisers and the most widely used are Di-Ammonium Phosphate (DAP) and Muriate of Potash (MOP). The Maximum Retail Price (MRP) of urea is controlled by the Centre at a low level and is unrelated to the cost of production and distribution which is higher (the excess amount is reimbursed to the manufacturers via the subsidy on a ‘unit-specific’ basis under the New Pricing...
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Covid-19 vaccine pricing: Modi has got it wrong

The Centre should make vaccination ‘free for all’ and conduct centralised purchases from the manufacturers Under the ‘Liberalised Pricing and Accelerated National Covid-19 Vaccination Strategy’ (LPANCVS), which kicked off on May 1, the Centre has plans to vaccinate all adults aged 18 and above — about a billion people. Given the mammoth task ahead, the vaccine pricing strategy has to be guided by two overarching considerations, namely (i) People should have absolutely no hesitation whatsoever in coming forward to get vaccinated, which, among other things, requires that this be done ‘free of charge’; and (ii) Manufacturers and suppliers should be willing to arrange for supplies of at least two billion doses within the shortest possible time frame, say, not extending...
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