"We will take a decision after getting inputs. It is necessary to take views of all stakeholders before taking an important decision," Sharma told PTI.
The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) has come out with a discussion paper giving pros and cons of permitting FDI in the sector.
On whether the government will take decision on this before general elections, Sharma said: "I cannot comment anything on the timing ... We have started a process, let it get completed".
It would provide "more responsive order taking and after-sales service to customers and competitive pricing; increased access to buyers/sellers, allow MSMEs and artisans to reach out to customers far beyond their immediate location, both locally within India and abroad", the paper has said.
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However, it would be against the spirit of FDI policy in multi-brand retail trading (MBRT). The government has last year permitted 51 per cent FDI in MBRT.
The DIPP has sought public comments on the paper till January 30.
India's FDI policy restricts e-commerce companies from offering services directly to retail consumers. At present, 100 per cent FDI is allowed in business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce but not in retail trading.