Arab Times

India announces plans to open up foreign investment

Modi seeks to counter accusation­s his reform drive is stalling

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NEW DELHI, Nov 10, (AFP): India’s government Tuesday announced plans for a sweeping liberalisa­tion of its foreign direct investment (FDI) regime, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks to counter accusation­s his reform drive is stalling.

The government said it would undertake a raft of reforms to open up 15 areas of the economy, easing the path for overseas investors in several critical sectors including defence, banking and constructi­on.

It will also lift the caps on investing in certain sectors including broadcasti­ng and air transport and will increase the use of “automatic” routes for gaining investment approval in others.

India’s Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said the reforms targeted New Delhi’s “top priority emphasis” of making it easier for companies to do business in India, notorious for its red tape and labyrinthi­ne regulation­s.

“In the last few months growth in India is being driven by public investment, some private investment and increased foreign direct investment,” Jaitley told a press conference.

“In some areas sectoral caps have been enhanced but more important than that some outdated conditiona­lities which existed along with the sectoral caps have been either done away with or eased,” he said.

The industry-specific reforms include lifting the investment cap on mobile television from 74 percent to 100 percent and opening

up the plantation sector to allow investment in coffee and olive tree plantation­s, where previously only tea was allowed.

The reforms come after Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party suffered a drubbing in state elections in Bihar, in a battle fought largely over developmen­t in

India’s poorest state.

They also appear to be a signal of intent ahead of the prime minister’s first visit to Britain as leader later this week, where he will be seeking investment from the former colonial power.

“It is a welcome move and will be pos-

itive in the eyes of foreign investors but the impact will only be felt years down the line,” Devendra Kumar Pant, chief economist at India Ratings & Research in Delhi, told AFP. Modi stormed to power in 2014 promising sweeping reforms to revive the faltering economy.

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