In News
- Recently the Minister of Commerce has reviewed the Open Network for Digital Commerce.
- This initiative is seen as a step towards ending the dominance of platforms such as Amazon and Flipkart.
- These platforms have been accused by the minister of wielding monopoly power and breaking the law.
Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC)
- The task of implementing DPIIT’s (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade) ONDC project has been assigned to the Quality Council of India (QCI).
- An ONDC gateway has also been established.
- About 20 entities covering all network components are at various stages of on-boarding.
- DPIIT has approved a budget of approximately Rs 10 crores for initial work on the project.
- It has been suggested to establish a private sector led non-profit company.
Role of private sector led non-profit company
- The entity is expected to provide
- A start-up mindset for a population scale implementation.
- Enabled by a management with a futuristic vision,
- Leadership with a deep understanding of commerce,
- Comfort with cutting edge technology, and
- Missionary outlook to drive change..
- The role of the entity would be
- To develop the network by adopting and building enabling technology
- Encouraging wide-scale voluntary participation by ecosystem players.
- It would ensure network discipline by establishing a code of conduct and rules of the network
- Based on principles of consumer protection,
- fair trade and
- regulatory conformity.
- The entity will also provide foundational services for managing the network like
- digital infrastructure for the network, common registry, certification of participants and certifying agencies, grievance redressal, etc.
- The entity will develop and operate reference applications for buyers, sellers and gateway for market activation and priming the network along with partner entities.
- It will also support SMEs in their digital transformation
- By developing readymade tools to help existing software applications quickly adapt to the network
- A non-profit company structure
- removes any incentive for owners to drive for profit maximization,
- keep focus on ethical and responsible behaviour
- while providing for trust, rigorous norms of governance, accountability and transparency
Aim of ONDC
- The government wants to change the fundamental structure of the e-commerce market
- From the current “platform-centric model to an open-network model”.
- The ONDC project is modelled around the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) project that is seen as a success by many.
- The UPI project allows people to send or receive money irrespective of the payment platforms on which they are registered.
- Similarly, ONDC will ensure that buyers and sellers in the e-commerce market transact regardless of the platforms on which they are registered.
- Thus,a buyer registered on Amazon, may directly purchase goods from a seller who sells on Flipkart.
Need for open sourcing for e-commerce players
- ONDC will democratise e-commerce.
- The E-commerce market is currently broken into “silos” operated and dominated by few platforms.
- Amazon and Flipkart,for instance, have been accused of discriminating among sellers on their platforms
- They promote certain seller entities in which they hold indirect stakes.
- It would also provide alternatives to proprietary e-commerce sites.
- It will put an end to the domination of the e-commerce market by a few large platforms.
- Such as Amazon and Flipkart, which have been accused of wielding monopoly power and breaking the law.
- Providing a level playing field.
- Open networks like ONDC will connect buyers and sellers across platforms.
- Buyers will be able to access sellers across platforms without having to switch between multiple platforms.
How should the project be conceptualised?
- The three “layers” of the open digital ecosystem (the tech, governance and community ) must be managed for the greatest chance of success.
- Tech layer
- The “tech layer” should be designed for minimalism and decentralisation.
- Decentralisation would lessen scope for hackers.
- If possible, the government should restrict its role.
- If built, the platform should be built on “privacy by design” principles.
- It should collect minimal data (especially personal data).
- But they must be based on clear rules that protect the consumer interest.
- Tools like blockchain could be used to build technical safeguards that cannot be overridden without active consent.
- The “tech layer” should be designed for minimalism and decentralisation.
- Governance layer
- The “governance layer” around this should allay business fears of excessive state intervention in e-commerce.
- Any deployment of standards or tech should be accompanied by law or regulation.
- Passing the data protection bill and creating an independent regulator should be a precondition for collection of data.
- Community layer
- A “community layer” can foster a truly inclusive and participatory process.
- By seeking inputs and feedback.
- Once the framework is implemented, ensuring quick and time-bound redressal of grievances will help build trust in the system.
- A “community layer” can foster a truly inclusive and participatory process.
Criticism
- Critics argue that the domination may not be due to any captive hold that these platforms have over buyers and sellers.
- Sellers are already free to list their products across various e-commerce platforms even in today’s platform-centric e-commerce model.
- Buyers also routinely shop across platforms.
- Price Comparison Services
- Such services offered by various private websites bridge the information gap and help buyers make better decisions.
- Further, the supposed “monopoly” that platforms are said to enjoy
- May be no different from the limited monopoly that any business has over its property.
- Critics like columnist Andy Mukherjee have actually characterised the ONDC as a “solution searching for a problem”.
Way Ahead
- Wide participation from ecosystem should be ensured and the institutional structure should be created
- So as to ensure that the entity conducts itself in an ethical, cooperative, democratic and responsible manner.
- Wise Listing
- Government’s open network listing of products offered by various sellers must balance the interest of buyers as well as sellers.
- Compress timelines for making this network a reality soon
- Alternative to E-commerce
- Driving the adoption of ONDC in a sector with entrenched incumbents that have a dominant market share will be a challenge.
- The government should thus explore innovative ways to bridge the gaps in e-commerce markets.
- That can work seamlessly and has the ability to fulfil customer orders.
- Competition is a must
- As it generally pushes the platforms to prominently list products that are most likely to catch the fancy of buyers.
- Building Trust
- Special efforts must be made to build trust in the ONDC network
- Elaborate mechanisms must be put in place for dispute resolution.
- Investment
- To build exclusive on-boarding and listing processes.
Quality Council of India
E-Commerce
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Source: PIB
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