FIEO Points Out Defects in MEIS E commerce Policy
[FIEO/PUB/PR/13/19
dated 25 February 2019]
Responding to draft National E-Commerce Policy detailing,
amongst other, export promotion through E-Commerce, Mr
Ganesh Kumar Gupta, President, FIEO said that this is the
most timely initiative as E-commerce is a thriving market and is a rapidly booming
business around the globe. The need to promote cross-border e-commerce is, therefore,
most logical, considering the increasing digitization and IT access for e-commerce
across the globe and increasing penetration of IT & ITES in the country. Such
policy will provide Indian MSMEs global opportunity, help them in diversification
of exports and ease their liquidity through expeditious payment observed, FIEO Chief.
Such policy will attract new entrepreneurs particularly women and artisans in exports.
FIEO appreciated
the strategy to promote e-commerce not only through incentivising exports but also
by reducing compliances and cost particularly for MSME.
FIEO President
said that DGFT has already waived the fee for MEIS for e-commerce exports and extended
it to all courier terminals through which such exports can take place and draft
policy should take note of the same.
However, the
draft policy should address the following issues:
1. There is need
to bring uniform definition of “e-commerce” amongst various acts and policies in
India as the word is defined differently under the various acts and policies of
the Government.
2. The list of products
to be allowed for MEIS benefit through e-commerce only cover handicraft, handloom,
books & periodicals, leather footwear, toys and customised fashion garments,
which requires immediate expansion as many MSME units exporting auto-components,
jewellery etc. are deprived of MEIS.
3. Moreover, the
benefit of MEIS is only confined to e-commerce shipment
through foreign post offices at New Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai. The list of foreign
post offices should be expanded and must cover such post
offices near the export clusters.
4. The limitation
of Rs 25,000 for e-commerce exports/imports through courier,
as identified by the draft policy, should be either removed or enhanced to Rs 5,00,000 so that high value shipments
can be exported through courier mode availing fast track facility.
5. It is ironical
that e-commerce retail exports, which has taken birth because of digitalization,
is still in the manual mode in the country and the need of the hour is that the
entire e-commerce transaction move to a single online electronic module.
FIEO identified
that the key challenges for the MSMEs to increase their cross border trade footprint
include – low and irregular supply of products that have high international demand
and inadequate details of buyer and market-related information of the global market.
The non-existent direct market links between MSMEs at the cluster-level and overseas
consumers results in a weaker integration of the Indian
MSMEs at the lower tier levels both in regional and global value chains.