Google Representatives ‘Dominate’ Digital Competition Law Panel in India

Google Representatives ‘Dominate’ Digital Competition Law Panel in India
Photo: pexels.com 13.03.2023 540

Govt panel concludes stakeholder discussion on Digital Competition Law for regulating Big Tech. The composition of the panel was a source of dissatisfaction among market participants.

Two more representatives from the law firms which are currently representing Google before NCLAT in the ongoing matter have been invited to join the panel of experts who are supposed to draft the Digital Competition Act.

Earlier, the stakeholders including news publishers and start-ups had objected to the overwhelming presence of law firms representing big tech, including Google in the composition of the panel. The panel currently does not have any representative from news publishers.

Alliance of Digital India Foundation (ADIF) — a think tank for digital Startups, has reiterated its demand for expanding the MCA-appointed Panel to frame a draft digital competition law so as to give better balance to its composition and ensure the interests of Indian technology startups are safeguarded. 

The Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA) General-Secretary Sujatha Gupta has expressed hope that MCA would Co-opt digital news publishers into the Panel so as to give them a level-playing field and participate in the deliberations of the committee. 

The Corporate Affairs Ministry (MCA) had on February 6 constituted a 10-member inter-ministerial committee to examine the need for a separate law on competition in digital markets. The panel, had been among other things, tasked to prepare a draft Digital Competition Act.

The Panel’s terms of reference include a review as to whether existing provisions of the Competition Act 2002 and the rules and regulations framed thereunder are sufficient to deal with the challenges that have emerged from the digital economy and to examine the need for an ex ante regulatory mechanism for digital markets through separate legislation.

Meanwhile, the ADIF spokesperson said that Bigtech’s have increasing returns to scale and thus often tip quickly (within 3 to 5 years) to winner-take-all monopolistic outcomes. India must identify the small number of leading players or market winners that can negatively influence competitive conduct in the digital ecosystem, as ‘Systemically Important Digital Intermediaries' (SIDls), as recommended by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance in its recent report on ‘Anti-competitive practices by Bigtech companies’. Also, there is Adverse Impact on Indian Startup Ecosystem, as Rules of the game for Digital Internet Ecosystem are set up by BigTechs and Indian startup ecosystem have to abide by, the ADIF spokesperson added.

Also there is need for an ex-ante regulation, as timely intervention is a must in digital markets. Ex-ante laws are specially required to address the dual role played by SIDIs, both as platform service provider to business users and itself as a service provider to end users, the ADIF spokesperson added.

Source:  Hindu Business Line

digital markets  India 

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