Custom Search
Dear Readers,
Please Give Comments, Like and Send in Facebook, Subscribe this via RSS or E mail. Become a follower of this site through Google Friend Connect or Google reader or Blogger.... Feel free to email me at sadhubani@gmail.com for anything...
Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts

Foreign Direct Investment

|


 
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT(FDI)
 


Q.1. What is the objective of FDI?  

It is the intent and objective of the Government of India to attract and promote foreign direct investment in order to supplement domestic capital, technology and skills, for accelerated economic growth. Foreign Direct Investment, as distinguished from portfolio investment, has the connotation of establishing a 'lasting interest' in an enterprise that is resident in an economy other than that of the investor.  

The Government has put in place a policy framework on Foreign Direct Investment, which is transparent, predictable and easily comprehensible. This framework is embodied in the Circular on Consolidated FDI Policy, which may be updated every year, to capture and keep pace with the regulatory changes, effected in the interregnum. The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP), Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Government of India makes policy pronouncements on FDI.  

Q. 2. Who can invest in India? 
 

Investing in infrastructure Development

|


Investing in infrastructure Development

 

Infrastructure development needs sustained investments of a long-term nature. Not only is a rigorous monitoring of sector-wise targets critical for the success of the entire investment programme, it is also necessary for the policy environment to be dynamic in nature

 

Equitable development is dependent on sustained growth of an economy which is critically reliant on the sustainable development of infrastructure. Infrastructure is, therefore, a driver for inclusive growth. However, investments in infrastructure are not easily available due to requirements of lumpy capital investment with very low returns. Such investments are justified normally on grounds of social benefits rather than on financial viability.
 

India is poised to become the third largest economy in terms of GDP in the next two decades. At present, along with China, it is one of the fastest growing economies in the world. The growth momentum needs to be sustained to ensure that the fast pace of growth does not peter down. Absence of world class infrastructure facilities in India is often considered as one of the major impediments to growth. With the sprawling urbanization, demand for infrastructure continues to rise faster than the capacity in the economy to satisfy such demands.
 

Infrastructure sectors 

Glancing across the major infrastructure sectors, it is found that apart from telecom where teledensity is extremely high (79.28 in May 2012 as compared to 0.31 in 1981) and tariffs one of the lowest in the world, other sectors are yet to achieve levels of stable growth coupled with quality services. 
 

India has a road network of 33 lakh kilometres which is the second largest in the world. These roads carry 65 percent of the freight traffic and 80 percent of the passenger traffic of the country. National Highways carry 40 percent of the traffic, yet constitute only 1.7 percent (71,772 kms) of the total road network in the country and rural roads cover a length of about 26.5 lakh kms. Only 20 percent of this National Highways network is four-lane, 50 percent two-lane and 30 percent single-lane. The State Highways have also suffered from prolonged neglect. 

As regards Indian Railways, the largest rail network in Asia comprising about 64,000 route kilometres, there has not been much growth in the network since independence. At the time of independence, the route kilometres stood at 53, 596 kms. Hence, just about 10,000 route kilometres have been added in the last 65 years resulting in saturation of routes and restricted capacity. Naturally,
the share of goods and passengers carried has come down drastically since independence 

India has a total installed capacity of 2.03 lakh MW of power as against 1,362 MW in 1947. Thermal power forms 66.32 percent of this capacity and about hydel power 19.2 percent. The per capita consumption has increased 49 times since independence and stood at 813.3 kwh for the year 2010-11. This was, however, less than one-third of the world average per capita consumption of power. The power sector suffers from a peaking deficit of 9.8 percent and an energy shortage of 8.5 percent due to underinvestment and poor maintenance. The distribution segment of the sector suffers from average Aggregate Technical &Commercial losses of 27 percent and as per the 13th Finance Commission’s projections, in absolute terms, these losses are projected to increase to Rs. 1.16 lakh crore by the year 2014-15.
 

At the end of the 11th Five Year Plan, India was the 9th largest civil aviation market in the world with a passenger handling capacity of over 220 million and cargo handling capacity of 3.3 MT. However, air travel penetration continues to be low at 0.04 air trips per capita per annum. The Indian civil aviation sector was able to attract private investment of about Rs. 30,000 crore in four airports at Delhi, Mumbai, Hyderabad and Bengaluru. Airports Authority of India had a plan to develop 35 non-metro airports in the country. Of these, 26 have been developed and the balance would be completed in the current financial year.
 

The Indian maritime sector handles 95 percent of India’s foreign trade by volume. There are 13 major ports and 187 minor/ intermediate ports in the country. In the year 2011-12, the major ports handled 560.1 million tonnes of traffic and the total cargo handled by all the ports together was 915 million tonnes. The average turnaround time at major ports has increased from 3.93 days to 4.67 days between 2006-07 and 2010-11. There has also been a deterioration of 3 percent in the pre-berthing detention time.
 

Infrastructure development through the Five Year Plans 

In the initial Five Year Plans, it was widely believed that agriculture needed the necessary push to sustain the economy and the basic needs of food for the masses needed to be met. There was also considerable importance attached to setting up heavy industries. Infrastructure requirements were proposed to the extent of meeting the aforesaid objectives and were never the stated objective of the Plan exercise as such. However, there was heavy allocation of resources towards irrigation and power since the two were necessary for the development of the agrarian economy and industries. At a later stage in the 60s and the 70s, development of roads also picked up momentum.
 

In the mid-80s onwards, the thrust of the development process was towards obtaining state of the art technology for the country. This resulted in impressive development of communications technology. It was only from the Ninth Plan onwards that there was a definite thrust towards infrastructure development in the Five Year Plans. In each of the previous two Plan periods, the investment in infrastructure has almost doubled. This is evident from Figure 1.

 

Aadhaar Number in India

|


The Possibilities of Aadhaar Number


The Aadhaar number is a powerful tool as governments move to more individual-oriented programs. It is an identification infrastructure available to every resident in India, including infants


Economic growth is not an end in itself; its power lies in the ability it gives us, the financial wherewithal to address the many problems that a developing country faces. Governments in India have accordingly, with economic growth, implemented new social programs and safety nets that tackle our poverty, health and education challenges. The ambitions of these programs however, have been marred by challenges in execution, and a significant one has been the lack of clear identification and targeting of individual beneficiaries.

The problems of identification bog down millions of people in India across communities and in different situations. Rural women for example, face difficulties in accessing social benefits and employment, especially if they are not part of a household; most benefits and programs, as well as identity mechanisms are linked to households, and single women or widows are excluded as a result. Backward communities and tribal groups similarly find themselves caught in a cycle of exclusion, where the lack of one service cuts off identification documents and consequently access to other services, such as when the inability to get a ration card also means difficulty in opening a bank account.

Financing Agriculture : Some Issues (India)

|

Financing Agriculture : Some Issues (India)
 

Small and marginal farmers should be helped to liberate themselves from the stranglehold of moneylender and should be given priority for accessing low cost credit.

Post 1990 India has emerged as one of the world’s fastest growing economies. Its GDP growth rate of about 9% in the last few years is historically unparalleled except by our neighbour China. With rapid economic and social growth, however, new challenges emerge as also new growth strategies. For sustainable economic development, the crucial agricultural sector has to grow at a consistent 4% growth rate to GDP. Given the fact that 60% of our farming is monsoon dependent, ensuring consistent growth in food production is a major challenge, especially in wake of global warming and consequent climatic changes.

Credit has a very important role to play in supporting agricultural production and investment activities. The total credit flow to agriculture during the 10th Five Year Plan was expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 26.38%, as against the CAGR of 18.63% achieved during the 9th Five Year Plan. However, although the total agricultural credit has increased during the last six years, there are serious quantitative as well as qualitative concerns. The poor outreach of the formal institutional credit structure is a serious issue that needs to be corrected expeditiously. The findings of the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) 59th Round (2003), reveal that only 27% of the total number of cultivator households received credit from formal sources while 22% received credit from informal sources. The remaining households, comprising mainly small and marginal farmers, had no credit outstanding. Comprehensive measures aimed at financial inclusion in terms of innovative products and services to increase access to financial services and institutional credit, are required. Other issues such as ensuring credit flow to tenant farmers, oral lessees and women cultivators, complex documentation processes, high transaction costs, lack of availability of quality inputs across all regions, inadequate and ineffective risk mitigation arrangements, poor extension services, weak marketing links and sectoral and regional issues in credit are also required to be addressed expeditiously. The lack of rural credit bureaus also delays the process of sanction of agricultural loans as there is need to reduce loan risk and documentation procedures.

 

©2009 Development for You | Template Blue by TNB