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India’s FDI increased by 26% : Says UN .More Money and More Jobs

Ind4Ever

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From Shreerupa Mitra Jha Geneva, Jan 29 (PTI) Notwithstanding the decline in global foreign direct investment inflows, India’s FDI increased by 26 per cent in 2014 to an estimated USD 35 billion with maximum growth in the services sector, a UN report said today.

China toppled the US in 2014 as the world’s largest recipient of FDI — a position that the US had been holding almost consistently since the 1980’s — though with a modest increase of 3 per cent, the latest ‘Global Investment Trade Monitor’ report released by United Nations Conference on Trade and Development said.

The propping up of FDI in China is mainly due to an increase in FDI in the service sector, even as FDI in manufacturing sector particularly from Japan and in industries sensitive to rising labour costs fell.


The manufacturing sector in terms of net cross border mergers and acquisitions (M&A) sales recorded a decrease for India from USD 4,604 million to USD 4,172 million, the report said.

FDI flows to India increased by 26 percent in 2014 to an estimated 35 billion, with maximum growth in services sector especially in electricity, gas, water, waste management and information and communication, the report said.

This figure is one of the highest in recent years, though in 2008 FDI peaked in India with USD 47 billion investment followed by USD 35.6 billion in 2009. James Zhan, Director of Investment and Enterprise, at UNCTAD said, “India is still a bright spot for FDI despite a global decline. It is at a significant historical high though not at the highest level of investment.”

“If policy trends encourage liberalisation then we can expect more FDI in China despite a slowdown in economic growth,” said Zhan referring to new draft for full foreign investment law that was proposed last week in Beijing.

The top five FDI hosts in 2014 were China (USD 128 billion), followed by Hong Kong (USD 111 billion), the US (USD 86 billion), Singapore (USD 81 billion) and Brazil (USD 62 billion).

“In 2014 global FDI inflows declined by 8 per cent to an estimated USD 1.26 trillion due to fragility of the global economy, policy uncertainty and geo-political risks,” the report said.

The drop in FDI in the US has been primarily due to a fall in cross-border M&A sales, particularly due to the Verizon-Vodafone deal and stood at USD 10 billion in 2014 from USD 60 billion in 2013. It had exceeded USD 222 billion in 2008, the report said.

PTI
 
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very bad


verrrry bad....................................for @jamahir

jobs... jobs... is that all that indians want to do?? :sad:

first went the medical transcription industry, then went the international call centers, then went some international bank bpo's, then went other bpo's, and since 2011, the foreign software companies.
 
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jobs... jobs... is that all that indians want to do?? :sad:

first went the medical transcription industry, then went the international call centers, then went some international bank bpo's, then went other bpo's, and since 2011, the foreign software companies.

most likely we will move from all that to manufacturing jobs
 
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jobs... jobs... is that all that indians want to do?? :sad:

first went the medical transcription industry, then went the international call centers, then went some international bank bpo's, then went other bpo's, and since 2011, the foreign software companies.

I know the concept of holding a regular job is not popular in Pak, but it is quite important in India.
 
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most likely we will move from all that to manufacturing jobs

that is the idea, it seems.

there is a government agency called "national skills development corporation" which was started under the congress government to train students of colleges for real-world skills, mostly in the manufacturing sector... nsdc was started to teach people because colleges don't, and the india's services-export orientation is more or less ended.

but the problem is, especially "make in india", that other nations are called upon to come to india and set up factories for the products they recommend, and hand over the keys to indians... there is nothing real being created/innovated within india through this approach... creating/innovating requires different thinking.

that is not going to help indians have a good life... they are only replacing software/services jobs with manufacting jobs... the unnaturality of jobs and money is another thread and discussion but "make in india" won't work.

india should long have restarted with a clean slate, removed all these engineering colleges and jobs-oriented culture... learnings should be for real contribution, life should be easy.

I know the concept of holding a regular job is not popular in Pak, but it is quite important in India.

huzoor e aala, i am very much in india.
 
.
that is the idea, it seems.

there is a government agency called "national skills development corporation" which was started under the congress government to train students of colleges for real-world skills, mostly in the manufacturing sector... nsdc was started to teach people what colleges don't, and the india's services-export orientation is more or less ended.

but the problem is, especially "make in india", that other nations are called upon to come to india and set up factories for the products they recommend, and hand over the keys to indians.

that is not going to help indians have a good life... they are only replacing software/services jobs with manufacting jobs... the unnaturality of jobs and money is another thread and discussion but "make in india" won't work.

india should long have restarted with a clean slate, removed all these engineering colleges and jobs-oriented culture... learnings should be for real contribution, life should be easy.


huzoor e aala, i am very much in india.

Like all Congress schemes that too didnt deliver. Only way to prosperity is manufacturing like the Chinese did. Make in India hopefully will reach 1/4 th of the goal
 
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