The Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) will very soon put a draft ecommerce policy in the public domain to seek views and comments, a top government official said on Saturday. DPIIT Secretary Guruprasad Mohapatra said the ecommerce is a fast emerging sector and it is difficult to predict where it will go in the next couple of years. The country do not have e-commerce policy and now the department is currently working on this, he added.

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The government in February last year had already released a draft national e-commerce policy, proposing setting up a legal and technological framework for restrictions on cross-border data flow and also laid out conditions for businesses regarding collection or processing of sensitive data locally and storing it abroad. Several foreign e-commerce firms have raised concerns over some points in the draft pertaining to data.

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The secretary said that after releasing of the draft in February 2019, general elections happened and also lot of issues came up in the draft policy.

It is now recognised that the country should have a definite, clear, and coherent policy, which is keeping in tune with the requirement of the society and service providers, he noted.

He was speaking at Rajasthan STRIDE virtual conclave, which was organised by the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of Rajasthan. Mohapatra was replying to a question by DST Secretary Mugdha Sinha about the future of e-commerce as an industry and its role in the economy.

"So, the e-commerce policy firstly should lay down a very clear policy on what is data; what kind of data the e-commerce companies can use; how the? citizens' right of privacy can be protected; how the e-commerce data when it is being leveraged for other purposes, other commercial benefits accrue to the ecommerce data holder; how citizens like you and me can have access to those benefits.

"Secondly, there are lot of counterfeit and inferior products and violation of various safety standards. How can these be taken care of, how can consumer rights be protected. We have now finalised a (draft) e-commerce policy, very soon we will put in the public domain. That time we will request all of you to give comments on how to improve on the content of the draft e-commerce policy," he added.

Mohapatra said the sector is going to stay, its progress can not be halted, but at the same time citizens' rights should be protected and the laws of the land should prevail.

"So, that is how the e-commerce policy is being formulated," he said.

Talking about the role of startups in defence production, Mohapatra said as Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has recently announced to increase the FDI limit under automatic route from 49 per cent to 74 per cent in the defence manufacturing, there are lot of opportunities for startups in the sector.

In defence production, despite Make in India, there is a lot of import dependence, and this is something which the central government is thinking to address by encouraging more investments in India, he said.

"So, when you are talking about more investments, it could be through bigger entities in India or it could be also through startups. We have to work with the department of defence production to see these FDI norms for automatic route are revised from 49 per cent to 74 per cent," he said.

Mohapatra said that he sees a lot of interesting possibilities in the way strartups and Indian manufacturers in general can play a role in defence production in increasing India's self reliance.