September 20, 2024

Report Wire

News at Another Perspective

India receives $64 billion FDI in 2020, fifth largest recipient of inflows in world: UN

4 min read

India obtained USD 64 billion in Foreign Direct Investment in 2020, the fifth largest recipient of inflows on the earth, in accordance with a UN report which mentioned the COVID-19 second wave within the nation weighs closely on the nation’s general financial actions however its robust fundamentals present “optimism” for the medium time period.
The World Investment Report 2021 by the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), launched Monday, mentioned world FDI flows have been severely hit by the pandemic they usually plunged by 35 per cent in 2020 to USD 1 trillion from USD 1.5 trillion the earlier 12 months.
Lockdowns brought on by COVID-19 around the globe slowed down current funding tasks, and prospects of a recession led multinational enterprises (MNEs) to reassess new tasks.
The report mentioned in India, FDI elevated 27 per cent to USD 64 billion in 2020 from USD 51 billion in 2019, pushed up by acquisitions within the info and communication expertise (ICT) business, making the nation the fifth largest FDI recipient on the earth.

The pandemic boosted demand for digital infrastructure and companies globally. This led to larger values of greenfield FDI undertaking bulletins focusing on the ICT business, rising by greater than 22 per cent to USD 81 billion.
Major undertaking bulletins within the ICT business included a USD 2.8 billion funding by on-line retail big Amazon in ICT infrastructure in India.
The report famous that the second wave of the COVID-19 outbreak in India weighs closely on the nation’s general financial actions.
Announced greenfield tasks in India contracted by 19 per cent to USD 24 billion, “and the second wave in April 2021 is affecting economic activities, which could lead to a larger contraction in 2021,” it mentioned, including that the outbreak in India severely hit important funding locations similar to Maharashtra, which is residence to one of many largest automotive manufacturing clusters (Mumbai-Pune-Nasik-Aurangabad) and Karnataka (residence to the Bengaluru tech hub), which face one other lockdown as of April 2021, exposing the nation to manufacturing disruption and funding delays.
“Yet India’s strong fundamentals provide optimism for the medium term. FDI to India has been on a long-term growth trend and its market size will continue to attract market-seeking investments. In addition, investment into the ICT industry is expected to keep growing,” the report mentioned.

The nation’s export-related manufacturing, a precedence funding sector, will take longer to get better, however authorities facilitation might help. India’s Production Linkage Incentive scheme, designed to draw manufacturing and export-oriented investments in precedence industries together with automotive and electronics can drive a rebound of funding in manufacturing.
The report mentioned FDI in South Asia rose by 20 per cent to USD 71 billion, pushed primarily by robust M&As in India. “Amid India’s struggle to contain the COVID-19 outbreak, robust investment through acquisitions in ICT (software and hardware) and construction bolstered FDI,” it mentioned including that cross-border M&As surged 83 per cent to USD 27 billion, with main offers involving ICT, well being, infrastructure and power.Large transactions included the acquisition of Jio Platforms by Jaadhu, a subsidiary of Facebook for USD 5.7 billion, the acquisition of Tower Infrastructure Trust by Canada’s Brookfield Infrastructure and GIC (Singapore) for USD 3.7 billion and the sale of {the electrical} and automation division of Larsen & Toubro India for USD 2.1 billion. Another megadeal – Unilever India’s merger with GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare India, a subsidiary of GSK United Kingdom) for USD 4.6 billion – additionally contributed, it mentioned.
FDI outflows from South Asia fell 12 per cent to USD 12 billion, pushed by a drop in funding from India. India ranked 18 out of the world’s prime 20 economies for FDI outflows, with 12 billion {dollars} of outflows recorded from the nation in 2020 as in comparison with 13 billion {dollars} in 2019.
“Investments from India are expected to stabilise in 2021, supported by the country’s resumption of free trade agreement (FTA) talks with the European Union (EU) and its strong investment in Africa,” the report mentioned.
The report cautioned that whereas the Asian area has managed the well being disaster comparatively nicely, the latest second wave of COVID-19 in India reveals that important uncertainties stay.
“This has major impacts on prospects for South Asia. A wider resurgence of the virus in Asia could significantly lower global FDI in 2021, given that region’s significant contribution to the total,” the report mentioned.

FDI inflows to creating Asia grew by 4 per cent to USD 535 billion in 2020, making it the one area to file development and growing Asia’s share of worldwide inflows to 54 per cent. In China, FDI elevated by 6 per cent to USD 149 billion. While among the largest economies in creating Asia similar to China and India recorded FDI development in 2020, the remaining recorded a contraction, it mentioned.
The report added that FDI inflows in Asia are anticipated to extend in 2021, outperforming different creating areas with a projected development of 5-10 per cent.
Signs of commerce and industrial manufacturing recovering within the second half of 2020 present a robust basis for FDI development in 2021. Yet, substantial draw back dangers stay for the numerous economies within the area that wrestle to comprise successive waves of COVID-19 circumstances and the place fiscal capability for restoration spending is restricted. “Economies in East and South-East Asia, and India, will continue to attract foreign investment in high-tech industries, given their market size and their advanced digital and technology ecosystem,” the report mentioned.