Maha, Delhi NCR accounts for over 50% of FDI in India

Maharashtra and Delhi's National Capital Region accounted for over 50 per cent of the

RELATED ARTICLES

foreign direct investment inflows into the country during April- December 2010-11, says industry ministry's latest data.

Maharashtra attracted maximum foreign inflows at USD 5.24 billion (Rs 23,804 crore) and accounted for 35 per cent of the country's total FDI during April-December this fiscal.

Delhi's National Capital Region (NCR) including parts of Uttar Pradesh and Haryana, received USD 2.16 billion (Rs 9,846 crore) FDI during the first three quarters of the current financial year.

The NCR accounted for 19 per cent of the country's total FDI.

According to experts, the main reason for the maximum inflows in Maharashtra and NCR is substantial improvement in the infrastructure.

"Infrastructure in these areas have improved considerably and that is making them attractive destination for FDI in India," an economist said.

Karnataka attracted the third highest FDI inflows worth USD 1.12 million during the period, followed by Andhra Pradesh (USD 1.04 billion), Gujarat (USD 427 million) and Goa (USD 300 million).

Sectors, which attracted maximum FDI include services, telecommunication, metallurgical industries, power, computer hardware and software, and construction activities.

During the period under review, the highest FDI of USD 5.74 billion came from Mauritius followed by Singapore (USD 1.44 billion), Japan (USD 1.19 billion), the US (USD 1.05 billion) and the Netherlands (USD 1.01 billion).

Overall, FDI inflows dropped by 23 per cent to USD 16 billion during April-December 2010-11 against USD 20.86 billion in the year-ago period.

In view of the declining foreign investment inflows, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is considering setting up a panel to find out reasons for the FDI slowdown and suggest ways to encourage it.

Simultaneously, the government is also considering to liberalise FDI policy to attract more investments.

The FDI for 2009-10 at USD 25.88 billion was lower by five per cent from USD 27.33 billion in the previous fiscal.

Post new comment

E-mail ID will not be published
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

FC NEWSLETTER

Stay informed on our latest news!

EDITORIAL OF THE DAY

  • Foreign brokerages must be Street-smart to win battle of bourses

    Earlier this week, Financial Chronicle reported that foreign brokerages were failing to crack the retail broking market in India, once seen as very pr

INTERVIEWS

GV Nageswara Rao

MD & CEO, IDBI Federal Life

Timothy Moe

Goldman Sachs

Chander Mohan Sethi

CMD, Reckitt Benckiser India

COLUMNIST

Urs Schöttli

India needs to project soft power

The rise from a regional to a global p­ower is ...

Robert Clements

Walk the talk when giving others advice

The only thing one does with advice is to pass ...

Bubbles Sabharwal

Keeping our value system uninjured

Every time one reads a newspaper, there is fr­esh news ...