Asserting that Policy making is exclusive right of the executive,
the Supreme Court refused to interfere with the policy on FDI in retail.
The Centre informed the court
that Reserve Bank of India had notified the amendments to the regulations
permitting foreign direct investment in multi-brand retail.
Amendments in the Foreign
Exchange Management (Transfer or Issue of Security by a Person, Resident
outside India) Regulations, 2000, allow foreign direct investment in retail
sector. It permits 100% FDI in
single-brand product retail
and 51% in multi-brand retail. The amended rules have
been published in the Gazette of India on October 30
What petitioner said in
its plea?
The petitioner had challenged
the notification saying that the amendments would have to be placed before
Parliament for its approval as per Sections 47 and 48 of the FEMA. He assumes
that the Centre might not place it before the Houses.
The Centre had already issued
about 50 FDI licences, and before getting parliamentary approval, it might
issue more, and they could not be undone even if Parliament rejected the
amendments. The petitioner told the court that if amendments paving the way for
multi-brand FDI in retail sector were rejected by parliament, then this
rejection would not erase the licences issued in pursuance of this amendment.
He urged the court to declare
the last part of Section 48 of the FEMA, 1999, "as unconstitutional"
and declare it as excess delegation of legislative powers.
What does Section 48 of
FEMA say?
Section 48 of FEMA says “Every
rule and every regulation made under this Act shall be laid, as soon as may be
after it is made, before each house of parliament, while in session…that any such
modification or annulment shall be without prejudice to the validity of
anything previously done under that rule and regulation."
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