0.2451
7667766266
x

Revised FDI Policy

iasparliament Logo
April 23, 2020

Why in news?

India has revised its FDI policy to prevent opportunistic takeovers of firms hit by the lockdown.

What was the amendment?

  • India said that an entity of a country that shares a land border with India can invest in firms here only through government route.
  • This applies to “beneficial owners” who is resident of a neighbouring country - even if the investing company is not located there.
  • While the note did not name any country, analysts see the amendments as aimed at possible Chinese investments.

Why was this decision taken?

  • The decision came days after China’s central bank had raised its shareholding in HDFC to over 1% from 0.8%.
  • As of December 2019, China’s cumulative investment in India has exceeded $8 billion.
  • This is far more than investments by other countries that share borders with India.
  • A Brookings India paper pegs the total current and planned Chinese investment in India at over $26 billion.

What was China’s response?

  • China has termed the move as violation of international trade principles.
  • It has called for India to revise these “discriminatory practices” and treat investments from different countries equally.
  • Chinese Embassy in India said that India’s move violates WTO’s (World Trade Organisation’s) principle of non-discrimination.
  • It says that India’s move goes against the general trend of liberalization and facilitation of trade and investment.

What is India’s argument?

  • India maintains that its FDI policy is not aimed at any one country.
  • It says that this move only aims to curb “opportunistic” takeovers of Indian firms, which are under strain.
  • India says that the amendments are not prohibiting investments.
  • It has only changed the approval route for investments.
  • Many sectors in India are already subject to this approval route.

What is the ground on which India’s move is discriminatory?

  • India’s move is seen as a discrimination against certain countries for non-security reasons.
  • This may not be seen favourably on the global stage.
  • Most of the countries that have tightened their investment regulations have done in such a way that it would apply to all countries.

What have other countries done?

  • European Commission - It issued guidelines to ensure a strong EU-wide approach to foreign investment screening at such a time.
  • The aim was to preserve EU companies and critical assets in areas like health, med research, infrastructure essential for security, etc.
  • Australia - It temporarily tightened rules on foreign takeovers over concerns that strategic assets could be sold off cheaply.
  • All foreign takeover and investment proposals will now be scrutinised by Australia’s foreign investment review board.
  • Spain, Italy and the US too have implemented investment-related restrictions.

Has India done this before?

  • It is the first-time that a move to impose additional requirements for certain countries is taken.
  • However, India has imposed such measures on investments into certain sectors.
  • From 2011, the government had mandated approval for any FDI coming into the pharmaceuticals sector.
  • In 2010, the government banned FDI in cigarette manufacturing.
  • India had also blocked certain FDI investments during bilateral standoffs with China.

 

Source: The Indian Express

Login or Register to Post Comments
There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to review.

ARCHIVES

MONTH/YEARWISE ARCHIVES

sidetext
Free UPSC Interview Guidance Programme
sidetext