Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

FDI in India up 74% to $2.21 bn

April 18, 2012 16:12 IST
India received $2.21 billion in foreign direct investment in February, showing an annual growth of 74 per cent, taking cumulative inflows to $28.40 billion for the April-February period of the last fiscal.

In February 2011, the country received FDI worth $1.27 billion. Experts say there is a much greater potential for attracting higher foreign investment provided economic reforms are pushed.

"There is an urgent need for strong reforms like 100 per cent FDI in sectors like multi-brand retail and insurance. There is a need to boost investor confidence, $2 billion in month is not a big number," Ficci Secretary General Rajiv Kumar said.

The sectors which received large foreign FDI inflows during the 11-month period of 2011-12 are: services ($5.05 billion), pharmaceuticals ($3.21 billion), telecom ($1.99 billion), construction ($2.52 billion), power ($1.61 billion) and metallurgical industries ($1.76 billion), an official said.

Mauritius remained the top source of inflows ($9.42 billion), thanks to the double taxation avoidance treaty.

Other sources were Singapore ($5.07 billion), Japan ($2.86 billion), UK ($2.75 billion), Germany ($1.54 billion), Netherlands ($1.21 billion) and Cyprus ($1.42 billion).

FDI inflows into India totalled $19.42 billion in 2010-11, down from $25.83 billion in 2009-10.

Recently, the government has streamlined the procedure to boost foreign investment into the country and also allowed FIIs to invest up to 23 per cent in commodity exchanges without seeking its prior approval.

© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.