Clarify e-commerce rule: Cong. Government should come forward to rescue traditional merchants, says party
19/04/2020 , SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT, NEW DELHI
The Union Home Ministry should clarify if e-commerce companies are allowed to sell only essential items or they can sell non-essential commodities too from April 20, the Congress said on Saturday.
In a videoconference with presspersons on Saturday, senior party leader Ajay Maken highlighted the plight of retail traders during the lockdown.
He said the new guidelines of the Ministry for limited economic activities denied a level playing field for the traditional traders.
“For the essentials items, traders have been allowed to open their shops and sell, but for non-essential items, if only the e-commerce companies are allowed, then the traders are being not given a level playing field,” he said.
“What we are asking from the government is first they should clarify their April 15 order and then it should come forward to rescue these traders and ensure that they don’t have to pay fixed electricity charges. Some amount of help should be given so that they can pay salaries and the property taxes should also be not collected at commercial rates from the shopkeepers,” Mr. Maken added.
As per the 6th economic census of 2013, after agriculture, retail trade was the most dominant economic activity and accounted for 35% of the total economic activities.
“As far as the employment generation is concerned, retail trade accounts for one-fight of the total employment in India. It gives employment to 2.72 crores families in the entire country. So, it is one of the biggest employment generator, second only to the manufacturing sector,” he noted.
Traders had closed their shops for the past one month and earlier suffered due to demonetisation, e-commerce competition and the GST, he said.
Other State governments should follow the Congress-ruled Punjab and Rajasthan where fixed charges for electricity for non-domestic connections had been deferred by two months, Mr. Maken said.
Tewari seeks panel meet
In a related development, Lok Sabha member and senior party leader Manish Tewari wrote to the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance Jayant Sinha, demanding a meeting of the committee to discuss the situation arising out of COVID-19.
“Even before the lockdown that commenced on the 24th of March 2020, the Indian economy was not in the pink of the health. However, the last 25 days have demonstrated how fragile our economy is and the poor have been the worst sufferers of this tragic spectre,” Mr Tewari wrote, while asking for a meeting post April 20 when some of the restrictions are set to be relaxed.
Relief package ‘peanuts’
Separately, senior leader M. Veerappa Moily, slammed the Centre for the relief package of Rs 1.72 lakh crore announced earlier.
“The government should have ensured at least a package of 9% of GDP, which works out to Rs 17.5 lakh crore. What the government and RBI has done is only peanuts, which will not allow the economy to stabilise, forget about taking off”, he said.
(With inputs from PTI)
19/04/2020 , SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT, NEW DELHI
The Union Home Ministry should clarify if e-commerce companies are allowed to sell only essential items or they can sell non-essential commodities too from April 20, the Congress said on Saturday.
In a videoconference with presspersons on Saturday, senior party leader Ajay Maken highlighted the plight of retail traders during the lockdown.
He said the new guidelines of the Ministry for limited economic activities denied a level playing field for the traditional traders.
“For the essentials items, traders have been allowed to open their shops and sell, but for non-essential items, if only the e-commerce companies are allowed, then the traders are being not given a level playing field,” he said.
“What we are asking from the government is first they should clarify their April 15 order and then it should come forward to rescue these traders and ensure that they don’t have to pay fixed electricity charges. Some amount of help should be given so that they can pay salaries and the property taxes should also be not collected at commercial rates from the shopkeepers,” Mr. Maken added.
As per the 6th economic census of 2013, after agriculture, retail trade was the most dominant economic activity and accounted for 35% of the total economic activities.
“As far as the employment generation is concerned, retail trade accounts for one-fight of the total employment in India. It gives employment to 2.72 crores families in the entire country. So, it is one of the biggest employment generator, second only to the manufacturing sector,” he noted.
Traders had closed their shops for the past one month and earlier suffered due to demonetisation, e-commerce competition and the GST, he said.
Other State governments should follow the Congress-ruled Punjab and Rajasthan where fixed charges for electricity for non-domestic connections had been deferred by two months, Mr. Maken said.
Tewari seeks panel meet
In a related development, Lok Sabha member and senior party leader Manish Tewari wrote to the Chairman of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance Jayant Sinha, demanding a meeting of the committee to discuss the situation arising out of COVID-19.
“Even before the lockdown that commenced on the 24th of March 2020, the Indian economy was not in the pink of the health. However, the last 25 days have demonstrated how fragile our economy is and the poor have been the worst sufferers of this tragic spectre,” Mr Tewari wrote, while asking for a meeting post April 20 when some of the restrictions are set to be relaxed.
Relief package ‘peanuts’
Separately, senior leader M. Veerappa Moily, slammed the Centre for the relief package of Rs 1.72 lakh crore announced earlier.
“The government should have ensured at least a package of 9% of GDP, which works out to Rs 17.5 lakh crore. What the government and RBI has done is only peanuts, which will not allow the economy to stabilise, forget about taking off”, he said.
(With inputs from PTI)
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