Ahmedabad, Gujarat: A research paper has asked for a "detailed revision" of the Consumer Protection Bill, 2015 that was introduced in Parliament to replace the three-decade-old consumer protection law, during the monsoon session last month.
The paper has been prepared the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad by Professor Akhileshwar Pathak. The paper titled 'The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015: (Lack of) Rights of the Consumer to Terminate Sale Contract', stated that the law should have a specific provision for termination of contract from buyer's side.
"The rational and logical way of organising the law is to mention the rights of a consumer. A consumer could approach a consumer council for the redressal of the rights... The bill does not mention the rights of a consumer. Under the Sale of Goods Act, 1930, buyer has certain rights to terminate the contract," said the paper.
According to the paper, consumer protection law should rest on the foundations of contract law and the law of sale of goods. A new consumer bill has to conceptually express this foundation and the modifications it is bringing about in these laws.
"Without this, the law (of consumer protection) would become unclear, conflicting and confusing. The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015 is not secured in its foundation and needs revision," the findings of the research paper showed.
It said that a rational basis for a consumer law is that a consumer has certain rights and a consumer can approach a court or a forum for the enforcement of the right. This very basic organising principle was not followed in the Consumer Protection Act, 1986, which has been copied in the 2015 bill, said the paper.
The paper has been prepared the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad by Professor Akhileshwar Pathak. The paper titled 'The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015: (Lack of) Rights of the Consumer to Terminate Sale Contract', stated that the law should have a specific provision for termination of contract from buyer's side.
"The rational and logical way of organising the law is to mention the rights of a consumer. A consumer could approach a consumer council for the redressal of the rights... The bill does not mention the rights of a consumer. Under the Sale of Goods Act, 1930, buyer has certain rights to terminate the contract," said the paper.
"Without this, the law (of consumer protection) would become unclear, conflicting and confusing. The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015 is not secured in its foundation and needs revision," the findings of the research paper showed.
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
All-Party Meet On July 21 Ahead Of Parliament Session, Trinamool To Skip Top Research Institutions In India As Per NIRF 2023 Amit Shah, Bhupendra Patel Offer Prayers To Lord Jagannath In Ahmedabad Travel Influencer Aanvi Kamdar Dies After Falling Off A Waterfall Near Mumbai Amid Huge Row, Karnataka Pauses Bill For Reservation In Private Sector Firms Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Break 64-Year Royal Tradition In Surprise Move Biden Says Could Drop Election Bid If "Medical Condition" Emerged Russia Says It's Ready To Work With Any US Leader 3 People Die After Drowning In Lake In Telangana: Cops Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.