PUBLIC STATEMENT
24 May 2018
WALMART-FLIPKART DEAL:
CONTINUING ATTACK ON RETAILERS,
PRODUCERS, FARMERS & LABOUR,
AND ON INDIA’S DIGITAL SOVEREIGNTY
The US based Multinational
Corporation (MNC) Walmart’s acquisition of Flipkart undermines India’s economic
and digital sovereignty and the livelihood of millions in India. If the $ 16
billion deal goes through, two US companies (the other being Amazon) will
dominate India’s e-retail sector. They will also own India’s key consumer and
other economic data, making them our digital overlords, joining the ranks of
Google and Facebook.
The acquisition of the
largest e-commerce firm promoted by Indian entrepreneurs is the latest step in
a series of developments aimed at circumventing the existing cap on FDI in
multi-brand retail by permitting foreign-owned online retail in India, and
developing a digital stranglehold by foreign companies over India’s consumer goods
value chains.
This process saw the gradual
take-over of majority stake in the formerly Indian-owned Flipkart, the entry of
the world’s largest e-retailer Amazon, and now the take-over of Flipkart by
Walmart. Jack Ma, head of China’s Alibaba, says all e-commerce companies now
have integrated online and offline strategies, consolidating operations towards
one ‘new retail’. This is also evidenced by recent moves in the US by Walmart
to enter e-retail and by Amazon to move into brick-and-mortar retail. It should
therefore be clear to everyone that allowing FDI in e-retail in India is but a
back-door entry of foreign players into multi-brand retail. Ironically, the
same political party, which a decade ago strongly opposed the entry of Walmart
into India, is now happy to welcome its far more powerful, digitally-enabled
avatar.
India’s domestic digital retail
industry will of course suffer by the domination of these two US MNCs. But
worst affected will be small brick-and-mortar retail stores accounting for over
90% of the Indian retail sector, SME
manufacturers, small delivery companies and suppliers of goods including
farmers whose margins will be ruthlessly squeezed, with their behaviour
digitally-controlled. Walmart is well-known for its global supply chain,
especially of cheap goods from China, which means local manufacturers and
suppliers will suffer deep hits.
This is similar to what would
happen with FDI in brick-and-mortar multi-brand retail. It will, in fact, be
worse, as digitally-enabled ‘new retail’ becomes omnipresent and omnipotent.
The concentration of economic power with the two US MNCs, now constituting a
potential duopoly in India, will render them too powerful to be meaningfully
regulated. In the US, the trail of destruction of small stores, local
businesses, small manufacturers and countless workers left behind by Walmart
and other giant retailers is well documented, and the EU has also witnessed the
same. ‘New retail’ seeks to own and control key data of all trading activity
across sectors resulting in unassailable power. National policy or regulatory
remits over them would then be as ineffective as they currently are over Google
or Facebook. Manufacturers, suppliers
and traders, producers and service providers, all become enslaved to digitally
controlled platforms, working as per their parameters, but denied any rights or
benefits. In this context, it is critical that the Competition Commission of
India (CCI) examine the issue of monopolistic trade practices vis-a-vis this
deal.
It is argued that Walmart and
other retail giants will generate employment, but of what kind? Walmart has a
long history of busting trade unions, violating the right to collective
bargaining, paying poverty wages and disregarding social security laws. In
e-commerce, work will also be outsourced to couriers and other service
providers, making it a long stretch to prove that they are workers. Further,
even if Walmart and Amazon employ a few thousand more, they are unlikely to
neutralise the massive employment loss associated with the collapse of both the
formal and informal retail sector. In this business model, whether in retail or
in so-called ‘aggregators’ such as Uber, the giant corporations provide
temporary benefits to consumers, and hence appearing to be on their side, by
squeezing everybody in between including small producers and the vast majority
of workers in the supply chain.
Digitalisation will soon be central to a wide range of economic
activities, many of these being controlled by MNCs. A sovereign nation must be
able to regulate e-commerce companies, making them comply with policies that
uphold public interest, and ensuring that all economic actors get their fair
share. This will be next to impossible with giant corporations operating from
abroad and storing all their data overseas. There is an urgent need to reverse
the entry of foreign e-commerce companies and their take-over of Indian entities,
and to evolve effective regulations to govern the operations of domestic
entities and protect the interests of the different players involved.
Digital companies such as
Google and Facebook frequently refuse government or court orders for content take-down
asserting that their data, algorithms
and platforms operate from the US, and are subject to the latter’s laws. It will
not be very different for data and Artificial Intelligence powering e-commerce
platforms. This is what makes it extremely difficult to nationally regulate
global digital companies, including e-commerce ones, and the reason that
digital platforms in key sectors, including on-line retail, should be
domestically owned.
After trailing behind India
in software technologies till a decade back, China is now a global leader in
digital technologies. China has been able to leverage its growing software
capability because it has incubated domestically-owned digital e-commerce
systems such as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent, which also store their data
locally.
The Government is seemingly
blind to, or does not care about, the extra-ordinary dangers that the country
would face if India’s e-commerce ecosystems are foreign-owned and controlled.
Not just China, but the US and EU have also begun to disallow foreign takeovers
of digital companies considered of strategic or economic importance. If the
growing tendency of foreign control of digital platforms in key sectors is not
resisted and reversed, India runs the danger of what has been called digital
colonization.
Citizens of India should be
deeply concerned about the ongoing developments in the e-commerce and
especially the online retail space, the latest of which is the Walmart-Flipkart
deal. We the undersigned, call for an urgent national debate on this important
issue of economic independence and digital sovereignty, affecting the interests
of many millions of Indians in different walks of life from workers to farmers,
small shopkeepers and suppliers, manufacturers and traders, and a host of service
providers, apart from potentially compromising consumption data of hundreds of
millions of Indians.
Pending a national debate
involving all the affected constituencies, and an informed collective decision
based on it, we further demand that the Government of India halts Walmart’s
takeover of Flipkart, upholds the policy of restricting FDI in multi-brand
retail, and draws up a policy in consonance with this for online retail. We
also seek a comprehensive policy on leveraging the strategic value of India’s
data for the interest of India and her people, and on domestic ownership and
regulation of digital platforms in key sectors.
Endorsed by:
Organisations/ Networks
1. All India Bank Officers Confederation (AIBOC)
2. All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS)
3. All India Online Vendors Associations
4. All India Public Sector and Central Government Officers
Confederation
5. Centre for Financial Accountability ( CFA)
6. Chamber of Associations of Maharashtra Industry and Trade
(CAMIT)
7. Delhi Science Forum
8. Environment Support Group (ESG)
9. Federation of Traders Organisations of West Bengal
10. Focus on the Global South
11. Forum against Free Trade Agreements (FTAs)
12. Free Software Movement of India (FSMI)
13. Hawkers Joint Action Committee
14. India FDI Watch
15. Indian Social Action Forum (INSAF)
16. IT For Change
17. Knowledge Commons
18. National Alliance of Peoples Movements (NAPM)
19. National Fishworkers Forum (NFF)
20. National Working Group on Patent Laws and WTO (NWGPL)
21. New Trade Union Initiative (NTUI)
22. Small Business Congress
Individuals:
1. Prabir Purkayastha, Chief Editor, Newsclick
2. Prof. Biswajit Dhar, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New
Delhi
3. Prof. CP Chandrasekhar, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU),
New Delhi
4. Prof. Dinesh Abrol, Institute for Studies in Industrial
Development (ISID), Delhi
5. Prof. Jayati Ghosh, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU)New
Delhi
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