India Must Win Back Foreign Investors Now

INDIA NEEDS TO WIN BACK FOREIGN INVESTORS

Syllabus:

GS 3:

  • Indian economy and related issues.
  • Balance of Payment .

Why in the News?

The Union government recently increased the effective import duty on gold from 6% to 15% to reduce imports and ease pressure on India’s balance of payments amid rising oil prices and external sector vulnerabilities affecting the global economy.

India Must Win Back Foreign Investors Now

BALANCE OF PAYMENTS IN INDIA

●      Current Account: It records international trade in goods, services, remittances, and investment incomes between India and the rest of the world, reflecting the current account balance.

●      Capital Account: It captures inflows and outflows related to FDI, portfolio investments, external borrowing, and reserve changes, alongside the financial account tracking financial transactions and foreign liabilities.

●      Current Account Deficit: A persistent CAD indicates higher import dependence and external vulnerability in international payments.

●      Role Of Forex Reserves: Adequate foreign exchange reserves help stabilise the foreign exchange market and absorb external shocks.

●      Importance Of External Stability: Sustainable external balances are essential for macroeconomic stability and long-term economic growth in international economics.

INDIA’S EXTERNAL ACCOUNT CHALLENGES

  • Portfolio Capital Outflows: Foreign portfolio investors have withdrawn significant capital from Indian equity markets and the foreign stock exchange, reflecting weakening global investor confidence in international markets.
  • Rising Current Account Deficit: Increasing oil prices due to the West Asia conflict threaten to widen India’s current account balance deficit substantially.
  • Balance Of Payments Stress: India is experiencing consecutive years of BoP deficits, ending the earlier comfort of persistent external surpluses and current account surplus periods.
  • Global Economic Uncertainty: Geopolitical conflicts, tariff wars, and global fragmentation are increasing external vulnerabilities for emerging economies in the international monetary system.
  • Pressure On Exchange Rate: Capital outflows and higher import bills can weaken the rupee through exchange rates, increase imported inflation, and complicate macroeconomic management in the foreign currency market.

UNDERSTANDING INDIA’S CURRENT ACCOUNT DYNAMICS

  • Merchandise Trade Deficit: India consistently runs a large merchandise trade deficit because imports exceed exports, especially in energy-related sectors, affecting the overall trade balance.
  • Importance Of Invisibles: Surplus generated through services exports, remittances, and capital transfers helps offset the merchandise trade imbalance in economic transactions.
  • Software Export Dependence: India’s software and IT-enabled services exports significantly support the external account position and contribute to a trade surplus in services.
  • Remittance Contribution: Strong inward remittances from overseas Indians remain a critical stabilising factor for the current account in international finance.
  • Structural Vulnerability: Dependence on oil imports and external capital exposes India to global economic and geopolitical shocks in international trade.

THE IMPORTANCE OF GOLD AND OIL IMPORTS

  • Energy Import Dependence: India relies heavily on imported crude oil, making external balances vulnerable to international oil price fluctuations in global trade.
  • Gold Import Burden: Gold imports contribute substantially to India’s non-oil trade deficit and widen the current account gap, impacting the trade balance negatively.
  • Consumption Behaviour Impact: High domestic demand for gold and fuel creates sustained pressure on foreign exchange reserves and foreign currency holdings.
  • Inflationary Risks: Rising global energy prices increase imported inflation and affect fiscal stability through subsidy burdens in deficit countries.
  • Policy Intervention Need: Demand-side measures and behavioural changes are required to reduce excessive non-essential imports affecting international payments.

GLOBAL CAPITAL FLOWS AND INDIA

  • Changing Nature Of Capital: Global investment flows are increasingly influenced by geopolitics, strategic interests, and industrial policy considerations in international financial markets.
  • Two-Speed Investment World: Advanced economies are attracting larger shares of global savings and FDI, while developing countries face declining inflows and capital account deficit pressures.
  • Politicisation Of Investment: Capital allocation is increasingly linked to strategic alignments and geopolitical stability rather than purely economic efficiency in international investment decisions.
  • Competitive Pressure: Emerging economies must compete harder to attract foreign investment amid uncertain global conditions and financial integration challenges.
  • Need For Investor Confidence: Policy stability, tax certainty, and institutional efficiency become critical determinants of capital inflows and foreign assets accumulation.

IMMEDIATE STABILISATION MEASURES

  • Tax Reforms: India could consider a residence-based capital gains tax system exempting non-residents from long-term capital gains taxation to improve the exchange rate regime.
  • Reducing Investor Irritants: Lower taxation on foreign investors may improve market attractiveness and revive portfolio inflows in the foreign exchange market.
  • Rationalising Withholding Taxes: Simplified tax structures and inflation-indexed thresholds could ease compliance and encourage investments in foreign bonds and assets.
  • Cautious Use Of FCNR Bonds: FCNR bonds should remain emergency instruments rather than primary responses to external account pressures and foreign currency needs.
  • Demand-Side Corrections: Raising domestic fuel prices and discouraging excessive gold imports can help reduce import dependence and improve the current account balance.

FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT REFORMS

  • Automatic Route Expansion: Further liberalisation of FDI norms can improve India’s attractiveness as an international investment destination.
  • Sectoral Liberalisation: Remaining restrictions on foreign investment ownership caps could be reconsidered strategically to attract more foreign assets.
  • Press Note 3 Reforms: Rules governing investments from neighbouring countries may require balanced refinement for economic and security considerations, potentially easing capital controls.
  • Fast-Track Approvals: Faster clearance mechanisms can improve ease of doing business and investor confidence in financial transactions.
  • Geopolitical Risk Management: Investment screening systems similar to CFIUS in the United States can balance openness with national security in the international investment position.

BOOSTING INDIA’S COMPETITIVENESS

  • Infrastructure Development: Front-loading infrastructure investments and completing budgeted capital expenditure remain essential for growth sustainability and international competitiveness.
  • Labour Reforms: Effective implementation of the four labour codes can improve labour market flexibility and industrial competitiveness in global imbalances.
  • Employment Expansion: Increasing labour-force participation through labour-intensive manufacturing and agro-processing sectors is critical for surplus countries.
  • Judicial Efficiency: Faster dispute resolution through AI-enabled case management and commercial courts can improve business confidence in economic transactions.
  • Ease Of Doing Business: Improved single-window clearance systems and regulatory simplification can reduce transaction costs in international markets.

LONG-TERM STRUCTURAL REFORMS

  • Trade Liberalisation: India must deepen integration into global value chains through trade agreements and tariff rationalisation in global trade.
  • Strengthening Manufacturing: Expanding PLI schemes into labour-intensive sectors can support export competitiveness and employment generation in international trade.
  • Energy Sector Reforms: Inclusion of electricity and petroleum products under GST can improve efficiency and reduce cascading taxation affecting financial transactions.
  • Financial Deepening: Developing deeper domestic capital markets can reduce excessive dependence on volatile portfolio investments from the foreign stock exchange.
  • Corporate Bond Market Expansion: Stronger domestic debt markets can create stable long-term investment financing sources and reduce reliance on foreign bonds.

KEY RISKS TO INDIA’S EXTERNAL STABILITY

  • Oil Price Shocks: Escalating geopolitical conflicts can sharply increase India’s import bill and inflationary pressures, worsening external debt levels and foreign liabilities.
  • AI Disruption Risks: India’s software export surplus faces potential long-term challenges from advances in Artificial Intelligence technologies affecting the trade surplus.
  • Declining Capital Flows: Reduced foreign investor appetite can weaken financing capacity for current account deficits in deficit countries.
  • Currency Depreciation Risks: Persistent external deficits may lead to rupee depreciation and imported inflation through exchange rates.