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Rediff.com  » Business » India slips in FDI rankings
This article was first published 9 years ago

India slips in FDI rankings

June 25, 2014 15:42 IST

Image: The World Investment Report, 2014 showed that policy uncertainty on allowing international supermarket chains kept investors on tenterhooks.
Photographs: Sahil Salvi BS Reporter in New Delhi

India drew $28 billion foreign direct investment in 2013 against $24 billion in the previous year, shows a report for 2014 by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.

However, its ranking in terms of most-favoured FDI destination slipped by a notch compared to the one given in the report for 2013.

The World Investment Report, 2014 showed that policy uncertainty on allowing international supermarket chains kept investors on tenterhooks.

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India slips in FDI rankings

Image: Reserve Bank of India.
Photographs: Reuters

As such, it suggested India should look at the option of non-equity flows in multi-brand retailing to avoid friction between local and foreign companies.

Though in terms of its ranking in drawing FDI inflows improved  a notch to 14th in 2013 compared to 2012, its  position in terms of   the most-favoured FDI destination took a beating  to the fourth in the report for 2014 against third in the 2013 report.

An Unctad report shows a survey of companies ranking countries in terms  of most-favoured FDI destination for  three  years.

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Tags: FDI , India

India slips in FDI rankings

Image: The survey in the 2014 report was based on the responses of 164 companies.
Photographs: Reuters

The report for 2014 shows the ranking for 2014-16 and the one for 2013 shows the ranking  for 2013-15. 

The survey in the 2014 report was based on the responses  of 164  companies.

India used to be the second most  attractive FDI  destination till  2008-10 after China (the 2008 report), but its ranking slipped since then, said FDI  researcher Premila Nazareth, who made a presentation at  the release of the report.

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India slips in FDI rankings

Image: In the 2012 report, India's position fell to the seventh but improved to the third position in the 2013 report.
Photographs: Amit Gupta/Reuters

After the 2008 survey, India’s ranking came down and it was positioned at the third destination for 2009-11 (the 2009 report).

It again came up at the second position in the 2010 report, but again slipped to the third  position in the 2011 report.

In the 2012 report, India's position fell to the seventh but improved to the third position in the 2013 report. 

It should be noted that retrospective amendments to the Income  Tax Act in 2012 drew flak from investors.

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Tags: India , FDI

India slips in FDI rankings

Image: A stock trader at work.
Photographs: Reuters

Nazareth said policy uncertainty and slowing down economy are taking  a toll on India’s most- favoured investment destination ranking.

Although India drew slightly more FDI in 2013 than in the previous year, ‘foreign investment continues to flow into single-brand retail, no new investment projects have been recorded in multi-brand retail and, in fact, divestments have taken place’, the report added.

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India slips in FDI rankings

Image: Major multinational corporations that entered India after the first round of liberalisation have taken steps to get out of the market.
Photographs: Reuters

Major multinational corporations that entered India after the first round of liberalisation have taken steps to get out of the market.

For instance, Walmart abandoned its plan to open full-scale retail outlets in India and dissolved its partnership with Bharti. International supermarket chains’ ‘passive and even negative reactions to the second round of retail liberalisation in India were due partly to the strict operational requirements and continued policy uncertainties’, the Unctad said.

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India slips in FDI rankings

Image: For those that have committed FDI, such as Tesco, the government will work out something later.
Photographs: Reuters

The National Democratic Alliance government has said it will not allow FDI in multi-brand retail.

For those that have committed FDI, such as Tesco, the government will work out something later.

Tesco is the only foreign company to have made a proposal to invest in Indian supermarkets.

When the government opened single-brand retailing to foreign investment in 2006, it allowed 51 per cent foreign ownership.

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India slips in FDI rankings

Image: Shoppers leave a retail store inside a shopping mall in Mumbai.
Photographs: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters

Five years later, it allowed 100 per cent FDI in single-brand retailing.

In September, 2012, the previous United Progressive Alliance government allowed up to 51 per cent FDI in multi-brand retailing.

Thanks to policy changes in 2006, annual FDI inflows to the trade sector in general jumped from an average of $60 million during 2003-05 to about $600 million during 2007-09, the report said.

Inflows have fluctuated between $390 million and $570 million in recent years.

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India slips in FDI rankings

Image: A Walmart Neighborhood Market store.
Photographs: Jacob Slaton/Reuters

The share of the sector in total FDI inflows rose from less than a per cent in 2005 to about three per cent during 2008-09.

However, that declined to around 2.5 per cent in 2012, the report showed.

The report suggested that a different approach could be considered for foreign investment in the Indian retail industry, in terms of mode of entry, franchising and other non-equity forms of multinational participation.  

Such arrangements would allow India to benefit from foreign capital and know-how while minimising potential tension between foreign and local stakeholders, it added.

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Tags: FDI , India

India slips in FDI rankings

Image: A KFC outlet.
Photographs: Ramon FVelasquez/Wikimedia Commons

Punit Shah of KPMG said the franchise model is currently being used in India.

“It’s not a bad idea but it is a sub-optimal solution. It would not promote FDI flows in the country,” he said.

Several foreign companies with strong brand names have established a presence in India through franchises.

These include Kentucky Fried Chicken, Domino’s Pizza and Subway.

This is the preferred route in the hospitality and food businesses.

At the global level, the Unctad report projected FDI flows to rise to $1.6 trillion in 2014 from 1.45 trillion  in the previous year.

The report pegged FDI flows to further increase to $1.75 trillion in 2015 and $1.85 trillion in 2016.

Nazareth said even the projected FDI inflow  in 2016 is way down  than $2 trillion in 2007.

Source: source