Broadband
woes, security concerns, legal issues dog online trade.
E-commerce is booming in India. With the market expected to touch
the Rs 2,300-crore mark next year, business on the Net is bound to
happen.
However, there are many issues to contend with broadband
connections, security and legal infrastructure, delivery of goods,
credit and debit card payments, taxation laws and finally,
mindsets.
Ajit Balakrishnan, chairman and CEO of Rediff.com, says, There
are several factors that will influence the growth trajectory of
e-commerce. Such as, the growth of the overall Internet user base,
quality of Internet access through the use of the Net arising from
offices and homes versus colleges and cybercafes, quality of
access enabled by broadband penetration and the extent of credit
card (stands at 5 million) and debit card use on the Internet.
Can our current legal infrastructure support this boom? No,
asserts Pavan Duggal, Supreme Court advocate and president,
Cyberlaws.Net.
He explains: The Information Technology Act, 2000 is not
adequate. The legal infrastructure is not ready to cope with the
projected growth. The use of digital signatures is minimal (around
35,000 only). Electronic contracts that have been issued have not
tested the judicial waters. The nations expectations for an
effective, efficient, legal infrastructure to support e-commerce
have been belied.
Another important question is: How safe it is to transact
on the Net? Gautam Thakar, country manager of eBay India
Marketplace, is of the view that as more and more Indians get
comfortable with e-commerce, there will be enhanced awareness
about online shopping and the peoples trust in it will
deepen. Many Indians opt for cash on delivery as a payment option,
thus paying for items only when they are delivered at home, he
points out.
At eBay, we educate users on safety tips like reading item
descriptions fully, looking at sellers feedback score (their
online reputation) and asking additional questions to get complete
clarity. In addition, we protect users through online tutorials on
detecting spoof mails, phishing sites and new identity theft
crimes, he adds.
Encryption also offers a safer environment.
The biggest myth about online shopping is the safety of credit
card information provided on the Internet. Frauds do not happen
online on sites like Sify, Rediff or Indiatimes. Fraud happens if
one has access to information regarding a credit card number and
the cards expiry date, which is readily available on charge
slips that individuals sign at restaurants and petrol pumps, notes
Pankaj Chandra, Business Head, Ecommerce, Sify.com.
Banks should provide customers alerts attached with any
online transaction, done via credit or debit cards or via bank
accounts, by email or SMS or both within a fixed time period. They
should allow consumers to set up their own liability slabs by
creating ceilings on online spends. It should also be made
mandatory for banks to declare the names of blacklisted websites
on their websites, suggests Preeti Desai, president,
Internet and Mobile Association of India.
That said, there are other challenges faced by e-commerce
websites in India.
Delivery of goods to consumers by couriers and postal services is
not very reliable in smaller cities, towns and rural areas.
Besides, shopping portals have been asking for tax holidays and
waivers (like the 15 per cent tax on data services on mobiles).
As of today, inter-state tax applied by the government to
products shipped out to other cities takes away a lot of price
benefit for consumers. The government should encourage and, maybe,
provide sops to online malls to facilitate transfer of goods to
consumers across the length and breadth of the country, says
Chandra.
Dinesh Agarwal, Founder and CEO, Indiamart.com, says, The
main speed-breakers include a long pending requirement of
clarification on issues like sales tax and service tax for online
transactions. Many state government officials are still not clear
or do not agree that web services (web-designing, hosting and
e-commerce facilitation) are IT-enabled services and they try to
apply sales tax to these services considering them as
software/commodities. Similarly, sale of goods and services
through e-commerce has not been clearly dealt with by Acts on
value-added tax and sales tax.
Desai suggests that the government should simplify indirect
taxation as currently, it is incredibly complex and eats up
incredible margins.
The reason behind the online travel ticketing segments
meteoric rise in this country, according to Chandra, is the low
touch-and-feel combined with an immense price benefit for the
end-user as well as the convenience of the service being available
at arms length.
Other segments will see a rise of similar proportions if more
people perceive similar benefits of shopping online.