‘Lobbying needs to be defined; cos should make disclosures’

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Press Trust of India: New Delhi, Dec 24 2012, 02:03 IST
Calling for a need to define lobbying through a legal framework to differentiate between advocacy and bribery, Corporate Affairs Minister Sachin Pilot has favoured disclosures by companies and industry bodies about their representations to government on specific policy issues.

“I think that time has come to define what is acceptable and what is not. What is legal and what is not legal. I think, in most countries we have that definition, but in India, it is pretty vague. It is wrong to assume that lobbying means bribery, but some people allege that it is bribery,” Pilot told PTI in an interview.

There has been a heated debate within Parliament and outside in the recent past on lobbying after it came to light that various global companies, including retail giant Wal-Mart, lobbied with the US lawmakers to push for their entry and other business interests in the Indian markets.

While lobbying is legal in the US, the companies as well as their lobbyists are required to make quarterly disclosures with the US Congress about such activities and the money spent on the same.

However, there are no specific regulations about lobbying and disclosure of these activities in India.

Asked whether the companies and industry bodies in India should also make such disclosures on a quarterly or yearly basis, Pilot said: “I think, they should.”

“There is no harm in making the disclosures if you are professionally and officially calling upon certain official or a minister, MLAs, MPs or even a Sarpanch to say that there is

... contd.

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