This was in response to Ross blaming policy for Amazon's India investment cut.
Business
Standard : While US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross blamed
India’s e-commerce policy for US online retail giant Amazon’s cut
in investment, his Indian counterpart Piyush
Goyal attributed it to the company’s inability to engage in
“predatory pricing’’ any longer.
In
a war of words at the India Economic Summit, Goyal said the spirit of
Indian law was to protect small trade which employed over 120 million
and that multinational e-commerce should not use muscle power of
large capital at low value to drive small retailers out of business.
“According
to news reports, Amazon is spending one-third of what it spent the
year before in capex. It would probably have spent a lot more in
India if it didn’t feel that there was a diminution in growth due
to some of those (e-commerce) policies. There is also that cost to
India by the policy,” the US commerce secretary said.
Goyal
argued that the spending cut was possibly due to other factors like
over-investment in the previous years. “(Amazon) may have
over-invested in previous years… I don’t know, I don’t run its
business.” He added that maybe the firm now recognises that it
can’t do “some of the things that it was possibly doing earlier”,
referring to deep discounts by online companies.
India
in February revised FDI norms for e-commerce, barring foreign-owned
firms from selling through their affiliated entities and offering
heavy discounts.
“India
is very clear on its domestic and political compulsions. Around
120-130 million are dependent on small retail, with 50-60 million
small shops present throughout the country… We welcome all
e-commerce
companies to work (in India) as agnostic platforms,’’ Goyal said.
He
added, “Don’t try to look at structures that fall within the
ambit of the law, but in some sense break the spirit of the law. That
is the position of the government as far as the BJP is concerned.”
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