How India Plans to Reinvent E-Commerce thru
ONDC, Amazon and Flipkart under Threat
Country is investing in e-commerce model that is based on
digital public goods rather than corporate monopolies
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The Indian government’s Open Network for Digital
Commerce, or ONDC, went live in Bengaluru, the country’s technology hub. ONDC is
an interoperable network that aims to help small retailers replicate the reach of
private e-commerce platforms—i.e., loosen the grip of Amazon.com and Walmart-backed Flipkart.
India wants to create
a new sort of public utility.
Success—or even a decent
attempt—would represent an existential threat to the expansion plans of U.S. Big Tech abroad. It could also be a
model for other developing nations that want to leverage the potential of e-commerce,
digital payments and other online services without handing the keys to a few big technology giants.
A little over a month
ago, the Indian government’s Open Network for Digital Commerce, or ONDC, went live
in Bengaluru, the country’s technology hub. ONDC is an interoperable network that
aims to help small retailers replicate the reach of private e-commerce platforms—i.e.,
loosen the grip of Amazon.com and Walmart-backed Flipkart. It
will enable the display of products and services from all participating e-commerce
platforms in search results across all apps on the network.
All of this comes as India
has been aggressively pursuing antitrust cases against large U.S. tech companies including
Meta Platforms META 6.53%increase;
green up pointing triangle, Google and Amazon.
The jury is still very
much out on how successful ONDC will be. But the network’s launch sends strong signals
about how India, which boasts the world’s second-largest population of internet
users, wants to cultivate its internet economy: It would prefer a competitive,
decentralized model built atop digital public goods.
That is starkly different
from the U.S. model centered on natural monopolies, often
feeding off advertising revenue, or from China’s highly censored and protected model.
Morgan Stanley sees ONDC
as, potentially, a significant threat to established brands and to platforms in
sectors such as ride-hailing and food delivery. The bank says over 30 companies
are in active discussions to align with ONDC, including Reliance Retail, Paytm and
Google.
The pillar of this vision
is India Stack, a set of software tools developed by government agencies and nonprofits, aiming to unlock the potential of secure identity
verification, e-commerce, and payments for the population as a whole.
One example: over 90%
of India’s population has now signed up for Aadhaar, the biometric identity-verification
system that is a key component of India Stack, according to the Indian government.
By 2019, around half had already linked their bank account to their ID, which can then be used
to make digital payments through India Stack’s Unified Payments Interface, according
to the International Monetary Fund.
That, the IMF notes, has
in turn helped facilitate the rise of new companies such as Jio, the telco that
has significantly expanded data access across India. Other India Stack elements
include the Open Credit Enablement Network, which aims to codify a common set of
credit standards for borrowers, lenders, and fintech intermediaries.
To be sure, a successful
open architecture for e-commerce faces major challenges. People buy from platforms
such as Amazon in part because the company invests in trying to ensure products
are legitimate and will arrive in good shape and in a timely manner. When things
go very wrong, customers have various forms of recourse including the courts. Building
that sort of accountability and reliability into an open access, decentralized platform
may prove quite difficult.
But success would add
up to a major threat to the business model of dominant U.S.-backed digital commerce
companies such as Amazon—particularly if elements of India Stack are then exported
to other large developing nations wary of U.S. tech giants’ clout.