E-Retailing and the Consumer Protection Bill, 2015: Drawing from the European Union Consumer Directives
Published By: IIMA on eSS | Published Date: October, 02 , 2015E-retailing has exponentially grown in the past decade. Alongside, consumer
grievances have also started surfacing. The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015
addresses this by giving the right to the consumer to cancel a consumer
contract within 30 days. This is called ‘cooling-off’. The provision applies to a
sale contract as well as a contract of service. The provision, in its current form,
is skeletal, only declaring the right. The right needs to be detailed for it to be
functional and effective. The European countries have had laws for more than a
decade on ‘cooling-off’, putting into force the European Union directives on
consumer rights. Exploring the European Union directives, the paper explores
the basis and principles for ‘cooling-off’ and develops a draft chapter on
‘Distance Contract’ for inclusion in the bill. The directives also require the seller
to give certain kinds of information and take the responsibility for the safe
delivery of the goods to the consumer.
Author(s): Akhileshwar Pathak | Posted on: Oct 15, 2015 | Views() | Download (1561)