City
Epaper

E-commerce has potential to drive growth in South Asia: Report

By IANS | Updated: December 16, 2019 20:10 IST

E-commerce can become a driver of growth across South Asia and boost trade between the region's countries, but its potential remains largely untapped, a new World Bank report said on Monday.

Open in App

The report, titled "Unleashing E-Commerce for South Asian Integration" launched in the Capital, said that although e-commerce has grown significantly in South Asia, online sales accounted for a mere 1.6 and 0.7 per cent of total retail sales in India and Bangladesh compared to 15 per cent in China and nearly 14 per cent globally.

"E-commerce can boost a range of economic indicators across South Asia, from entrepreneurship and job growth to higher GDP rates and overall productivity," said Sanjay Kathuria, World Bank Lead Economist and co-author of the report.

"By unleashing its online trade potential, South Asia can better integrate into international value chains, increase its market access, and strengthen commercial linkages between countries across the region," He added.

Increasing the use of e-commerce by consumers and firms in South Asia could potentially help increase competition and firm productivity, and encourage diversification of production and exports.

A survey of over 2,200 firms in South Asia showed that the top concerns on cross-border e-commerce sales included e-commerce related logistics, e-commerce and digital regulations, and connectivity and information technology infrastructure.

"These barriers are significantly higher when trading with other South Asian countries. The main international e-partners of firms in South Asia are China, the UK, and the US and not other South Asian countries," the findings showed.

Small and medium enterprises in the region reported that removing regulatory and logistical challenges to e-commerce would increase their exports, employment, and productivity by as much as 20-30 percent.

"Some practical steps to strengthen online transactions include leveraging the reputation of large e-commerce platforms to offer consumer protection, return and redress, and data security as an initial substitute for robust contractual and consumer protection mechanisms, and permitting cross-border e-commerce payments," said Arti Grover, World Bank Senior Economist and co-author of the report.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: chinaArti Grover
Open in App

Related Stories

Mumbai₹58-Crore Digital Arrest Scam: Maharashtra Cyber Probe Reveals Links to China, Hong Kong and Indonesia

CricketCricket Hong Kong China Unveils India’s Full Squad for Hong Kong Sixes 2025

InternationalUS Navy Helicopter and Fighter Jet Crash in Separate Incidents in South China Sea

OpinionsRare Earth Minerals Conundrum

InternationalTyphoon Ragasa Live Tracker Map: Deadly Cyclonic Storm Nears Vietnam After Wreaking Havoc in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan; Check Real-Time Status

कारोबार Realted Stories

BusinessMini car sales to remain below 100,000 units for 2nd year in S. Korea

BusinessSamsung to invest $309 billion over next 5 years

BusinessSouth Korea's SK to pour $87.9 billion into domestic investment through 2028

BusinessRepo Rate Cut Triggers FD Interest Drop, But Post Office Still Offers Highest 7.5% Return

BusinessFinance Ministry holds Chintan Shivir with states on flow of funds