Business Standard

FDI plans of six China firms may be put on hold

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

In sync with the current sentiment, the Union home ministry is likely to stall security clearance to a clutch of Chinese companies seeking to invest in India, according to officials close to the developmen­t.

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) received more than 20 proposals for foreign direct investment (FDI), including from China and Hong Kong, requiring security clearance between April and May.

“We are vetting some of these proposals which have come from various sectors. One of t he applicatio­ns is from a well known start-up,” an official said.

Six proposals for close to ~1,000 crore are under strict scrutiny, he said. “We await the inputs from the Research and Analysis Wing, intelligen­ce agencies, external affairs ministry, and embassies,” he pointed out, at a time when Chinese investment­s are under scrutiny across sectors, following the border face-off. The proposals are from sectors like informatio­n technology, internet business, and infrastruc­ture, among others. The list also includes trading- and logistics-related projects.

Recently, India tightened the foreign direct investment (FDI) policy for neighbouri­ng nations, with focus on China. This also applies to transactio­ns where the beneficial owner of the investment is from China. The amendments were

made to curb opportunis­tic takeovers or acquisitio­ns of Indian companies due to Covid-19.

This is applicable to all sectors and not just in historical­ly sensitive or critical ones, such as telecommun­ications, banking, insurance, defence and so on, said another official privy to the matter.

Sources in the ministry also hinted that if border tension escalated, India might put China under ‘prior referral category’ status.

This implies that visas will be issued after running a thorough background check on individual applicants from those countries.

The home ministry is the nodal authority to provide security clearance to foreign investment under the National Security Clearance Policy.

Experts say that in the current situation, obtaining security clearance is quite a task. “The processing of FDI applicatio­ns for government approvals takes between 8 weeks and 10 weeks, depending on the proposal and the ministry concerned. It is the subject of national security, which is mostly opaque and the ministry is not obliged to provide the reason for delaying an applicatio­n or even revoking a proposed investment,” said an FDI expert.

According to him, a total of 14-15 parameters are fixed in eight to nine sensitive areas like telecom, ports, and civil aviation. And in case of delay in clearance, the applicant cannot seek judicial interventi­on.

In the past few years, several tech companies and start-ups have attracted investment from China. Between 2015 and 2019, the home ministry has given security clearances to more than 6,000 investment proposals, most of which were from China, Singapore, the UK, and Hong Kong. However, in 2019-20, Chinese foreign investment stood only at $160 million, according to the official data.

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