Indian startups pledge support to draft digital competition bill
Prominent names like Matrimony.com, TrulyMadly, Innov8, QuackQuack, Magicbricks, Hoichoi, and Medibuddy are among startups which have written to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) on the issue
PTI
New Delhi, 16 May
Nearly 40 Indian startups have
joined forces to pledge support to the draft digital competition bill,
describing its proposed 'ex-ante' regulations as potential
"game-changer" in tackling the anti-competitive practices of big tech
companies.
With battle lines drawn within the
industry over provisions of the draft bill, prominent names like Matrimony.com,
TrulyMadly, Innov8, QuackQuack, Magicbricks, Hoichoi, and Medibuddy are among
startups which have written to the Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) on the
issue.
Asserting that the digital
competition bill, with its focus on 'ex-ante' regulations, could potentially be
a "game-changer" for the Indian startup ecosystem, these companies
have urged the MCA to move forward with the bill "at the earliest"
even as they accused the big tech players of often indulging in delay tactics.
As many as "40 Indian startups
have come out strongly in support of the draft Digital Competition Bill, which
proposes ex-ante regulations to curb anti-competitive practices of big tech companies,"
according to a press note.
As such, the ex-ante provision aims
to ensure that the behaviours of large digital enterprises are proactively
monitored and that the CCI intervenes before instances of anti-competitive
conduct transpire.
Currently, the Competition Act
primarily envisages an ex-post framework of intervention, wherein the CCI
intervenes after the occurrence of anti-competitive conduct.
"While requesting that the
government move forward with the Bill at the earliest and not give in delay
tactics, the startups have also asked for an upward revision of the thresholds
for designating Systematically Significant Digital Enterprises (SSDEs),"
according to a release.
They argue that the bill should
only target the real gatekeepers of the internet - firms that have long enjoyed
dominant positions, accumulating extensive resources, and influence to shape
the rules of the digital ecosystem.
"By narrowly targeting the new
law, the government can rein in monopolistic practices while making sure that
Indian startups have the space to grow within India and beyond Indian borders, to
compete globally," it said.
In a joint letter to Manoj Govil,
Secretary in the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, the startups said that the
digital competition bill, with its focus on ex-ante regulations, has the
potential to be a "gamechanger" for the Indian startup ecosystem.
The startups, however, felt that
current thresholds prescribed for designating Significant Strategic Digital
Entities were low and could "perhaps, inadvertently encompass startups and
other digital enterprises which are not gatekeepers". It has, therefore,
suggested an increase in the financial thresholds and also provided numbers for
end-user and business-user count, which would "better reflect" the
realities of the Indian startup ecosystem
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