Amazon's India Headache Is Turning Into A Throbbing Migraine
#1

Andy Mukherjee | Bloomberg
Updated: September 30, 2021 9:30 am IST


The world's second-richest man is getting an almost-daily reminder of how tough it will be to win in the second-most-populous nation.

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Chairman Jeff Bezos is on the cover of Panchjanya, a Hindi weekly he's unlikely to have ever heard of. The article inside, provocatively titled "East India Company 2.0", goes on to argue that Amazon is threatening the economic freedom of small Indian traders, attempting to hijack policies and politics, and - via Prime Video - degrading Hindu culture and promoting Western values and Christianity.

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Speaking of unfavorable articles, Lina Khan earned her spurs with her 2017 Yale Law Journal entry, "Amazon's Antitrust Paradox," and she's now the chair of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.

The reason to take the Indian publication's disapproval seriously is that Panchjanya, "the sound of righteousness," isn't any other magazine. Founded by one of the leading figures of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or the RSS, it's widely believed to be a mouthpiece of the Hindu cultural organization that stands behind Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, nurturing his right-wing nationalist party with ideological sustenance and voter mobilization.

The timing of Amazon's bad publicity couldn't have been worse. The media site Morning Context recently reported that the Seattle-based e-commerce firm is investigating a whistleblower complaint, which alleged that certain monies paid by the retailer have been funneled into bribes by one or more of its legal representatives in India.

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anonymous sources ...... put a number on what various Amazon entities had spent as legal fees in India in two years: 85.46 billion rupees (US$1.2 billion). The Confederation of All India Traders, which accuses the platform of hurting small sellers, latched on to the figure and wrote to Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal - himself no fan of e-commerce platforms - about a "whopping amount" being spent to "manipulate Indian government officials."

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To destabilize the American giant now will push more business to homegrown offline retailers. New rules that will protect them - by forbidding e-commerce market places from offering "significantly reduced prices" - are at a draft stage, and facing opposition within the government.



https://www.ndtv.com/opinion/opinion-ama...ne-2558571
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#2

Haha haha..Same old story.

Only Ambani can do such things.

Good la..Let locals control their biz fate.


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