Stating that e-commerce players were only "intermediaries" facilitating the sale of goods owned by a seller to a purchaser without getting into the element of "ownership", state Commercial Taxes Minister M C Sampath said, "this does not appear acceptable".
"We suggest that an omnibus e-commerce law may be enacted to cover B2B, B2C transactions with a view to protect consumers besides providing a level playing field to all players in retail space," he said.
"Tamil Nadu had strongly opposed the decision of the previous UPA government at the Centre to permit FDI up to 51 per cent in multi-brand retailing and 100 per cent in single brand retailing which came as a rude shock to the lakhs of traditional retail vendors in the country," the minister said.
He was addressing members at the Stakeholder Consultation Meeting on Formulation of Suitable Guidelines on e-commerce transactions in New Delhi, chaired by Commerce Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
Tamil Nadu's experience shows the entities carrying out e-commerce business located outside the state's jurisdiction fail to comply with the provisions of the applicable Sales Tax laws, Sampath said.
He said it was "unclear" whether e-commerce service providers comply with relevant labour and consumer protection laws.
