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2/1/2012. 2. Umesh KumarJoint SecretaryMinistry of Commerce
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1. 2/2/2012 1
2. 2/2/2012 2 Umesh Kumar
Joint Secretary
Ministry of Commerce & Industry
Department of Industrial Policy & Promotion
New Delhi
October 19, 2004
3. 2/2/2012 3 Economic Reforms- Some Milestones Abolition of industrial licensing, except in few strategic sectors
Foreign Direct Investment up to 100% allowed in most sectors under the Automatic Route
Rationalization of both indirect and direct tax structure
Portfolio investments by foreign institutional investors allowed in both equity and debt markets
Rupee made fully convertible on trade account
Removal of quantitative restrictions on imports
Financial sector reforms and decontrol of interest rates
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act enacted in 2003 Average import duties brought down as percentage of imports
Peak import duty rate 20%.
Rupee made convertible on trade account in 1993.
Movement towards capital account convertibility
New Foreign trade Policy seeks to double Indias share in global merchandise trade in 5 years
FRBM to reduce the revenue deficit to zero by 2007
Average import duties brought down as percentage of imports
Peak import duty rate 20%.
Rupee made convertible on trade account in 1993.
Movement towards capital account convertibility
New Foreign trade Policy seeks to double Indias share in global merchandise trade in 5 years
FRBM to reduce the revenue deficit to zero by 2007
4. 2/2/2012 4 Liberalisation of FDI Policy New Sectors opened since 2000
Insurance (26%)
Integrated Township (100%)
Defence production (26%)
Tea Plantation 100%
Capitalisation of royalty and ECB
Limits raised in Petroleum SectorNew Sectors opened since 2000
Insurance (26%)
Integrated Township (100%)
Defence production (26%)
Tea Plantation 100%
Capitalisation of royalty and ECB
Limits raised in Petroleum Sector
5. 2/2/2012 5 FDI Policy in India FDI up to 100% under Automatic Route except
Activities requiring compulsory licensing
Investor having joint venture in same or allied field
Limits specifically imposed under sectoral policies
National Treatment to investments
Foreign technology collaboration also encouraged
Royalty up to prescribed limits can be paid under automatic route
No limits on period of royalty payment under automatic route Recent liberalisation:
Transfer of shares to the limits under automatic route do not require Govt. approval except where SAST Code is invoked.
Ranked 41 on barriers to Foreign ownership. China 81, Malaysia 67th and Thailand 75th
Post establishment National Treatment
Recent liberalisation:
Transfer of shares to the limits under automatic route do not require Govt. approval except where SAST Code is invoked.
Ranked 41 on barriers to Foreign ownership. China 81, Malaysia 67th and Thailand 75th
Post establishment National Treatment
6. 2/2/2012 6 Investing in India Entry Routes Entry routes are easyEntry routes are easy
7. 2/2/2012 7 Other Policies on Investment Original investment, profits and dividends can be freely repatriated
Investors can acquire immovable property to the extent of their business needs
Capitalisation of royalty payable, and External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs) allowed
Outward investment policies also liberalised
Indian Corporates can invest in entities abroad up to 100% of their net worth
Outward investment US$ 3 billion in last two years
Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement with 57 countries.
Double taxation Avoidance Agreement with 63 countries Investment restrictions except township development. Investment restrictions except township development.
8. 2/2/2012 8 Industrial Licensing Policy Deregulation of industrial sector
Prior to 1991 investment decisions were subject to Government directives
Progressive deregulation and decontrol
Industrial license is now required only for
6 industries under compulsory licensing
Manufacturer of items reserved exclusively for Small-Scale Sector
Project is to be located around large cities
No industrial license is required for remaining items
Atomic Energy and Railway transport: only sectors reserved for Public Sector
9. 2/2/2012 9 Telecommunications: Policy Initiatives Policy Measures
1991: Telecom equipment manufacturing delicensed
1992: Cellular phone services opened to private sector
1994: National Telecom Policy (NTP)- private sector participation in basic services
1997: Telecom Regulatory Authority of India set up
1999: Migration from fixed license fee to revenue sharing regime
2000: National Long Distance service opened to competition
2002: International Long Distance & Internet telephony opened to competition
2004: Broadband Policy announced
Results
Cellular subscribers increasing @ 2 million every month
Sharp decline in tariff further boosting demand
Mobile phones set to reach 200 million in next 3-4 years Cell phones were only 6.2 million by March 2002
Investment requirement of US$ 20 billion by 2007
Tele-density to reach 15 by 2007Cell phones were only 6.2 million by March 2002
Investment requirement of US$ 20 billion by 2007
Tele-density to reach 15 by 2007
10. 2/2/2012 10 Power: Policy Initiatives Investment Policies
FDI up to 100% allowed under Automatic Route for all activities, except nuclear power
Tax and duty concessions for Mega Power Projects
No industrial license required
The Electricity Act, 2003
Thermal generation delicensed, captive generation freely permitted
Power trading recognised as a distinct activity
Introduces competition in market
Independent Regulation
Central Electricity Regulatory Commission
State Electricity Regulatory Commissions set up in 23 States
Additional capacity of 1000,000 MW required in next 10 years
Tax Incentives to Mega Power projects (Thermal Plants of 1000 MW `and Hydel Plants of 500 MW) selling power to more than one state
Import of capital goods free of import duties
Income tax holiday for a block of 10 years within first 15 years
Electricity Act
Mandatory metering
Open access to transmission system
Open access to consumers of over 1 MW in 5 years
Installed capacity 113500 MW (Sept 04)
Ix plan 19015 MW added against 40245 MW
X Plan target 41110 MW, 8518 MW added, 26862 MW under implementation.
11 IPPs for 4000 MW have achieved financial closure in last one year.
Improvement in financial health of 16 SEBs
Operating losses reduced from Rs. 25207 crores in 01-02 to rs. 17593 crores in 02-03.
3 states achieved 100% consumes metering
7 states have achieved 90% consumer metering
Tax Incentives to Mega Power projects (Thermal Plants of 1000 MW `and Hydel Plants of 500 MW) selling power to more than one state
Import of capital goods free of import duties
Income tax holiday for a block of 10 years within first 15 years
Electricity Act
Mandatory metering
Open access to transmission system
Open access to consumers of over 1 MW in 5 years
Installed capacity 113500 MW (Sept 04)
Ix plan 19015 MW added against 40245 MW
X Plan target 41110 MW, 8518 MW added, 26862 MW under implementation.
11 IPPs for 4000 MW have achieved financial closure in last one year.
Improvement in financial health of 16 SEBs
Operating losses reduced from Rs. 25207 crores in 01-02 to rs. 17593 crores in 02-03.
3 states achieved 100% consumes metering
7 states have achieved 90% consumer metering
11. 2/2/2012 11 Roads and Highways National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) set up
Central Road Fund to mobilize cess fund and leverage for market borrowings
Investment Policies
FDI up to 100 per cent permitted under the Automatic Route
Public Private Partnership through BOT toll-based and annuity based structures
Investment Incentives
Corporate tax holiday for a block of 10 years out of 20 years
Duty-free import of specified modern high capacity equipment for highway construction
National Highways Development Programme: Over 14,000 km of highways under implementation
Another 10,000 km being taken up under BOT Central Road Fund augmented to mobilise dedicated cess fund levied on diesel and petrol.
Leveraged for market borrowing and used for implementation of NHDP
NHDP
GQ 5846 KM (3121 completed) (2725 under impl.)
NSEW: 7300 KM(653 completed) (410 under impl.)
(6211 km to be awarded)
Port & Other Total 1133 KM (263 completed) (350 under impl.)
(520 km to be awarded)
Total 4037 km completed; 3485 km under implementation
6731 km to be awarded
Exp. US$ 4.93 billion
New 10,000 km to be added on BOT to connect all capitals and places of tourist interest Cost US$ 12 billion
Other incentives
Capital grant up to 40% of project cost to achieve viability
Control of national Highways Bill 2002 to prevent unauthorised occupation of highway land
Cess of US$ 0.03 per litre on petrol and diesel
Private sector participation
50 projects costing around US$ 2 billion initiated
Central Road Fund augmented to mobilise dedicated cess fund levied on diesel and petrol.
Leveraged for market borrowing and used for implementation of NHDP
NHDP
GQ 5846 KM (3121 completed) (2725 under impl.)
NSEW: 7300 KM(653 completed) (410 under impl.)
(6211 km to be awarded)
Port & Other Total 1133 KM (263 completed) (350 under impl.)
(520 km to be awarded)
Total 4037 km completed; 3485 km under implementation
6731 km to be awarded
Exp. US$ 4.93 billion
New 10,000 km to be added on BOT to connect all capitals and places of tourist interest Cost US$ 12 billion
Other incentives
Capital grant up to 40% of project cost to achieve viability
Control of national Highways Bill 2002 to prevent unauthorised occupation of highway land
Cess of US$ 0.03 per litre on petrol and diesel
Private sector participation
50 projects costing around US$ 2 billion initiated
12. 2/2/2012 12 Changing Role of Government Facilitator of private investment by creating an enabling environment
Provider of gaps in critical infrastructure to encourage investment
Partner of the private sector in public-private partnerships
Investor in social sectors such as health, education, etc., to serve the needs of society
13. 2/2/2012 13 Public Private Partnerships in Infrastructure Objective
To encourage private participation in infrastructure development
Criteria
Roads, railways, seaports, airports, power, water supply, sewerage, international convention centres
Project must be implemented by an entity with at least 40% private equity
Total Government support, central or state or their agencies, not to exceed 20& of total project cost
Funding
Viability gap funding: Government support to reduce project cost and help achieve financial viability
Funding in instalments, contingent on achieving predetermined milestones
At least 15% of funding to be disbursed after project is fully functioning
14. 2/2/2012 14 PPP Examples: Roads Sector The SPV model
NHAI invests around 30 per cent of the project as equity
Rest of the equity by private sector partner and/or from the market
11 projects taken up through the SPV route
BOT-Annuity based projects
Private concessionaire is responsible for construction and maintenance of the project
NHAI pays the concessionaire a semi-annual payment
Concession contract is awarded to the bidder quoting the lowest annuity amount
Under this approach, Government bears the traffic risk
Eight projects taken up under this route
15. 2/2/2012 15 India Investment Outlook Liberal and transparent investment policies, including FDI Policy
Among the top 5 Reformers in 2003 - World Bank
3rd most attractive investment destination: ATKEARNEY FDI Confidence Index 2004
Among the top 3 investment hot spots for the next 4 years: UNCTAD & Corporate Location
Most preferred BPO destination - ATKEARNEY
Indian economy expected to continue growing at 5% per annum till 2050: Goldman Sachs India ranked 5th after
Ranked after China and USA; was ranked 6th last year and 15th the year before.
India ranked 2nd most attractive destination for manufacturing after China, ahead of USA
Third hot spot after China and USA for the next 4 years
India ranked 5th after
Ranked after China and USA; was ranked 6th last year and 15th the year before.
India ranked 2nd most attractive destination for manufacturing after China, ahead of USA
Third hot spot after China and USA for the next 4 years
16. 2/2/2012 16 Thank You
17. 2/2/2012 17