New Delhi: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows to India declined USD 19 billion to USD 45 billion in 2021 but the country still remained among the top 10 global economies for FDI last year, the United Nations said on Thursday.
According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) World Investment Report flows of foreign direct investment recovered to pre-pandemic levels last year, hitting nearly USD 1.6 trillion.
However, the prospects for this year are grimmer as global FDI in 2022 and beyond will be affected by the security and humanitarian crises caused by the Ukraine war, by macroeconomic shocks set off by the conflict, energy and food price hikes, and by increased investor uncertainty.
India, which had received USD 64 billion in FDI in 2020, recorded a decline in FDI inflows in 2021 at USD 45 billion. But India was still among the top 10 economies for FDI inflows in 2021, ranking 7th after the US, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Canada and Brazil. South Africa, Russia and Mexico rounded up the top 10 economies for FDI inflows in 2021.
Flows to India declined to USD 45 billion. However, a flurry of new international project finance deals were announced in the country: 108 projects, compared with 20 projects on average for the last 10 years, the report said, adding that the largest number of 23 projects was in renewables.
Large projects include the construction of a steel and cement plant in India for USD 13.5 billion by Arcelormittal Nippon Steel (Japan) and the construction of a new car manufacturing facility by Suzuki Motor (Japan) for USD 2.4 billion.
Outward FDI from South Asia, mainly from India, rose by 43 per cent to USD 16 billion.
The report noted that the war in Ukraine will have far-reaching consequences for international investment in economic development and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in all countries. It comes as a fragile world economy was just beginning an uneven recovery from the effects of the pandemic.
The report said the direct effects of the war on investment flows to and from Russia and Ukraine include the halting of existing investment projects and the cancellation of announced projects, an exodus of multinational enterprises (MNEs) from Russia, widespread loss of asset values and sanctions virtually precluding outflows.
It added that to date, MNEs from China and India account for a negligible share of FDI stock in Russia (less than 1 percent), although their share in ongoing projects is larger.
The report said despite successive waves of COVID-19, FDI in developing Asia rose for the third consecutive year to an all-time high of USD 619 billion, underscoring the resilience of the region. It is the largest recipient region of FDI in the world, accounting for 40 per cent of global inflows.
The 2021 upward trend was widely shared in the region, with South Asia the only exception, where FDI inflows declined by 26 per cent to USD 52 billion in 2021 from USD 71 billion in 2020 as the large M&As (mergers and acquisitions) registered in 2020 were not repeated.
Inflows remain highly concentrated and six economies (China, Hong Kong, Singapore, India, the United Arab Emirates and Indonesia, in that order) accounted for more than 80 per cent of FDI to the region.
The report noted that international project finance announcements in industrial real estate have also grown continuously for several years, with no let-up during the pandemic. In 2021, deal numbers tripled to 152 projects with a value of USD 135 billion. Large projects include the construction of a steel and cement manufacturing plant in India for USD 14 billion and the construction of a 960-hectare pharmaceutical park in Vietnam for USD 10 billion.
Further it said that more than 60 per cent of greenfield investments are in developed economies, especially in Europe (45 per cent). Of the Research and Development (R&D) investment in developing economies, India captures almost half of all projects.
In developing economies, United States MNEs targeted India in 8 per cent of the deals, mostly buying minority stakes to gain access to the market and to local innovative solutions.
For example, eBay (United States) jointly with Microsoft (United States) and Tencent (China), acquired an undisclosed minority stake in online retailer Flipkart (India), for $1.4 billion in 2017. Similarly, Paypal (United States) acquired undisclosed minority stakes in a range of Indian companies across several industries, including software providers, online brokerage systems, professional services and electronic payments (Moshpit Technologies, Speckle Internet Solutions, Scalend Technologies, Freecharge Payment Technologies).
It added that four Chinese companies accounted for 11 per cent of the deals and invested a relatively higher share in developing-economy MNEs (34 per cent) than their developed counterparts did. They invested especially in Asia, with shares divided equally between India and South-East Asia, it said.
The report noted that investment facilitation measures undertaken by nations accounted for almost 40 percent of all measures more favourable to investment. Many new measures concerned the simplification of administrative procedures for investment.
For example, India launched the National Single-Window System, which will become a one- stop shop for approvals and clearances needed by investors, entrepreneurs and businesses.
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