Duterte’s bill to complement SIM Registration Law; find out what it's about


Davao City 1st district Rep. Paolo Duterte has filed a measure that, if enacted, would complement the recently-signed Republic Act (RA) No.11934, or the SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) Registration Law.

(Simon Hattinga Verschure/ Unsplash)


Duterte filed House Bill (HB) No.3050, or the proposed "Act protecting consumers and merchants engaged in Internet transactions, creating for this purpose the e-commerce bureau, appropriating funds therfore, and for other purposes".

The measure seeks to establish an E-Commerce Bureau in the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) with appropriate powers and functions to safeguard online transactions and help promote a robust internet-based economy in the country.

Duterte said that while both the SIM Registration Law and the proposed Internet Transactions Act under HB No.3050 aim to protect consumers from fraud, the latter provides for additional protection to e-commerce consumers and merchants alike.

The proposal also promotes trust and accountability in the country’s e-commerce market with the goal of further accelerating the growth of this sector, and encouraging micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) to take advantage of digital innovations to expand their businesses.

“In order to protect the merchant and the consumer, an effective regulation of commercial activities through the internet or electronic means must be established,” Duterte, a second-term solon, said in the bill’s explanatory note.

“This is to ensure that consumer rights and data privacy are protected, innovation is encouraged, fair advertising practices and competition are promoted, online transactions are secured, intellectual property rights are respected and product standards and safety are observed,” he added.

Under this measure, the e-commerce division currently set up in the DTI will be abolished and replaced by an E-Commerce Bureau.

The E-Commerce Bureau is authorized, among others, to mandate e-commerce entities to register in the DTI’s Online Business Registry; identify regulatory gaps affecting the e-commerce industry and recommend appropriate executive or legislative measures to foster this sector’s growth; and act as a virtual one-stop shop tasked to receive, address and facilitate the speedy resolution of consumer complaints on unresolved Internet transactions.

Duterte noted that as a result of the pandemic, online retail and other e-commerce services are slowly becoming the norm in the day-to-day lives of many Filipinos, who have found conducting contactless transactions easy and convenient.

The 2021 e-Conomy report for Southeast Asia by Google and Temasek found the Philippines the fastest-growing e-commerce market in the region. The country has seen 12 million new digital consumers since the start of the pandemic up to the first half of 2021, of which 63 percent are from non-metro areas and 99 percent say that they intend to continue using digital services going forward, the study said.

According to the study, the gross merchandise value (GMV) of the Philippines’ Internet economy is expected to reach $17 billion in 2021, or a 93 percent year-on-year surge, and up to $40 billion in 2025.

Duterte said these projections as well as the study’s findings that the Philippines still has the lowest digital consumer penetration in the region at only 68 percent of Internet users, underscore the need for Congress to pass a law to both safeguard and promote Internet transactions.

Establishing the DTI’s E-Commerce Bureau and according it with the appropriate powers and responsibilities will help “build trust between online merchants and consumers via secure and reliable e-commerce platforms where goods and services are transacted with transparency and utmost efficiency,” the Mindanaoan said.