Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

India still a foreign ...

-

Foreign direct investment in India is set to swell in coming years as investors stomach a lack of transparen­cy, poor infrastruc­ture and policy paralysis in their search for growth, profession­al services firm Ernst & Young (E&Y) said in a report.

Foreign direct investment in India is set to swell in coming years as investors stomach a lack of transparen­cy, poor infrastruc­ture and policy paralysis in their search for growth, profession­al services fir m Er nst & Young (E&Y) said in a report.

Over s e a s i nve s t ment i n Asi a ’s third-largest economy rose for the first time in three years in 2011, the re por t not e d, a s g l o bal i nvest o r s put their faith in rising salaries, an expanding middle-class and a large and cheap labour force.

“T h e f u n d a ment a l s t h a t make India attractive to investors remain intact,” Farokh T. Balsara, head of markets at Er nst & Young India, wro t e i n t h e r e p o r t r e l e a s e d o n Sunday.

“However, our respondent­s continue to cite inadequate infrastruc­ture and a lack of gover nance and transparen­cy as major obstacles to investment.”

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in India rose 13 percent to $50.81 billion in the first 11 months of 2011 from a year earlier, while the total number of projects rose 25 percent to 864, the report said, citing data from the Financial Times’ FDI Intelligen­ce service.

Business confidence in India has declined over the past year, as economic growth slowed from an annual rate of 8.5 percent in 2010/11 to about 7 percent, and corruption and policy paralysis discourage­d investment in big projects.

Just over half of chief executives in India are still “very confident” of revenue g rowth in the next 12 months, down from 88 percent a year ago, according to a recent survey by Pricewater­housecoope­rs.

The majority of companies surveyed by E&Y were confident in the long-ter m prospects for investment in India, given sluggish growth in the United States and debt problems in Europe.

Almost 70 percent of 382 inter national companies surveyed said they plan to increase or maintain their operations in India, said the report, which was prepared for the World Economic Forum gathering in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

Just 19 percent said they had no plans to enter the country or were preparing to withdraw.

Robus t d o mest i c d e mand, c o s t competitiv­eness and a cheap, everg rowing l ab o ur fo rc e were c i t e d India’s key benefits.

“Al t h o u g h t h e o n g o i n g g l o b a l uncertaint­y...(has) prompted some discomfort among global investors to make long-ter m commitment­s, India’s inherent advantages and its proven resilience to counter macroecono­mic challenges far outweigh these concerns,” Balsara said.

Automakers led the way in investing in India last year, boosting spending by 46 percent, E&Y said.

Technology and life sciences companies were other big spenders, while spending by foreign companies on infrastr ucture and retail projects declined.

Ford Motor Co, which said this month it would spend $142 million on its Indian operations, and the Renault-nissan alliance are among c o mpani e s t h a t a r e s t e p p i n g u p investment in India.

Ot h e r c o mpani e s, p a r t i c u l a rl y retailers, are not so sure.

Sweden’s IKEA, the world’s biggest furniture retailer, said this week that would be difficult to set up shop in India because of complex gover nment sourcing rules announced this month.

Plans by companies such as WalMar t were set back in December when the gover nment, under pressure from political allies, abandoned a long-mooted policy to open up the super market sector to direct investment by foreign companies.

(Reuters)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka