The reality behind falling net FDI
The Reality Behind Falling Net FDI in India
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Net FDI = Gross FDI inflows minus repatriation of capital, profit remittances, dividends, royalties, and outward FDI by Indian companies — the BoP-adjusted "true" foreign investment retained in India. [S1]
- India's net FDI collapsed from $44.0 billion (2020-21) to under $1 billion (2024-25), even as gross inflows remained large — exposing a widening gap between headline numbers and economic reality. [S5]
- The debate matters for UPSC because it touches GS-III (investment models, BoP, industrial policy), external sector sustainability, and the quality vs. quantity of capital inflows.
- The topic reveals how FDI composition (greenfield vs. M&A vs. retained earnings), investor class, and exit strategies determine development outcomes — technology transfer, employment, and external payments.
2. Why in the News
- June 11, 2026 — The Hindu BusinessLine (and associated analytical coverage) prominently featured the sharp fall in net FDI and the divergence between gross and net flows, citing data for FY 2024-25 and FY 2025-26. [S5]
- Chief Economic Adviser's defence: attributed weak net flows to profit repatriation and outward FDI by Indian multinationals, calling gross inflows and rising manufacturing FDI as evidence of strength. [S5]
- PIB (April 2025) reported gross FDI inflows of USD 81.04 billion in FY 2024-25, a 14% rise over FY 2023-24's USD 71.28 billion — a figure cited to project investor confidence. [S2]
- Simultaneously, BoP data showed net FDI near zero, triggering a policy debate on external sustainability and investment quality. [S1][S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1991: India's Statement of Industrial Policy opened the economy to FDI with explicit objectives — technology transfer, marketing expertise, modern managerial techniques, and export promotion — alongside foreign exchange conservation. [S6]
- 1991–2000s: Sectoral caps lowered; automatic route expanded; FIPB (Foreign Investment Promotion Board) set up for approval-route cases.
- 2017: FIPB abolished; most sectors shifted to automatic route under respective ministries.
- Post-2014: Policy emphasis shifted progressively toward volume of inflows — larger FDI numbers as a headline achievement — with relatively less attention to investment quality, technology content, and future outflow obligations. [S5]
- 2020-21: Net FDI peaked at $44.0 billion — the high-water mark. [S5]
- 2021-22 onwards: Net FDI began declining due to rising capital repatriation, dividend outflows, and royalties — outflows accelerating faster than fresh inflows.
- 2024-25: Net FDI fell to < $1 billion despite strong gross inflows. [S5]
- 2025-26: Partial recovery to $7.6 billion net, against gross inflows of $94.6 billion. [S5]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Net FDI peak | $44.0 billion (2020-21) | [S5] |
| Net FDI trough | < $1 billion (2024-25) | [S5] |
| Net FDI (2025-26) | $7.6 billion | [S5] |
| Gross FDI inflows (2025-26) | $94.6 billion | [S5] |
| Gross FDI inflows (FY 2024-25) | USD 81.04 billion (provisional) | [S2] |
| Gross FDI inflows (FY 2023-24) | USD 71.28 billion | [S2] |
| YoY gross growth (2024-25) | +14% | [S2] |
| Top sector (FDI equity, 2024-25) | Services — 19% of total; up 40.77% to USD 9.35 bn | [S2] |
| Manufacturing FDI share | Only 10.6% of total effective inflows (latest 4-year period) | [S5] |
| BoP definition of Net FDI | Gross inflows − capital repatriation − outward FDI | [S1] |
| FDI policy liberalisation | Began 1991 (Statement of Industrial Policy) | [S6] |
| Forex reserves (April 4, 2025) | USD 676.3 billion (~11 months import cover) | [S3] |
| Current Account Deficit (2024-25 proj.) | 0.9% of GDP (up from 0.7% in 2023-24) | [S3] |
| Regulatory body (FDI approvals) | Respective ministries (automatic route); DPIIT nodal | — |
| Outflow ratio (2022-23 to 2025-26) | ~$1.50 out for every $1.00 of fresh equity inflow | [S5] |
Three Types of FDI (analytical framework from article):
- Greenfield FDI — new physical capacity; highest technology/employment impact
- Mergers & Acquisitions (M&A) — ownership transfer; limited new capacity creation
- Reinvested Earnings — retained profits; moderate development impact but inflates gross numbers
Key BoP Outflow Channels: - Capital repatriation (return of principal) - Dividend remittances - Royalty and technical fee payments - Outward FDI by Indian companies
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Gross vs. Net illusion: Gross FDI of $94.6 billion in 2025-26 alongside net FDI of only $7.6 billion implies $87+ billion in outflows — profit repatriation, royalties, capital withdrawal — putting pressure on the current account. [S5]
- Manufacturing FDI quality concern: Real manufacturing FDI at only 10.6% of effective inflows signals insufficient industrial deepening despite high headline numbers; services-dominant FDI creates fewer forward linkages. [S5]
- CAD widening: Current account deficit projected at 0.9% of GDP in 2024-25, partly driven by rising profit outflows. [S3]
- Outward FDI by Indian MNCs: Indian companies investing abroad increase BoP outflows — legitimate but compresses net FDI metric.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- FDI composition matters strategically: M&A-heavy FDI may involve technology lock-in by foreign acquirers rather than technology transfer to India; royalty channels can serve as profit repatriation mechanisms even under equity caps.
- China+1 narrative vs. reality: While India benefits from supply-chain diversification interest, the manufacturing FDI share (10.6%) suggests the "China+1" dividend has not yet translated into deep industrial FDI.
- Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs): India's exit from several BITs post-2016 and renegotiation of the model BIT affects investor confidence on long-term capital retention.
Legal / Constitutional
- FEMA 1999 (Foreign Exchange Management Act) governs FDI inflows, outflows, and repatriation rules — the legal framework enabling capital exit.
- Consolidated FDI Policy (issued by DPIIT) defines sectoral caps, entry routes (automatic vs. approval), and downstream investment norms.
- RBI's BoP accounting framework determines how net FDI is computed — methodologically aligned with IMF Balance of Payments Manual (BPM6). [S3]
Administrative / Governance
- Policy drift: Original 1991 FDI policy's three pillars (technology, exports, forex) gave way to a singular focus on volume maximisation — a governance gap in monitoring investment quality. [S5][S6]
- Monitoring gap: No systematic tracking of technology transfer outcomes, incremental employment per dollar of FDI, or repatriation trends in real time.
- DPIIT vs. RBI dual reporting: DPIIT reports equity inflows; RBI reports BoP-based net FDI — the two figures differ, causing public confusion between gross and net metrics.
Historical
- Pre-1991: FDI heavily restricted under FERA 1973 (Foreign Exchange Regulation Act); foreign equity capped at 40% in most sectors.
- MRTP Act (Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969) further constrained large foreign business presence.
- Post-1991 trajectory mirrors East Asian experience — early FDI policies in South Korea and Taiwan were technology-conditional, unlike India's later evolution toward volume-first approach.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- FY 2024-25: Gross FDI inflows at USD 81.04 billion (14% YoY rise); net FDI near zero (< $1 billion). [S2][S5]
- April 2025: RBI policy update noted strong forex reserves at USD 676.3 billion (11 months import cover). [S3]
- FY 2025-26: Net FDI recovers modestly to $7.6 billion; gross inflows at $94.6 billion — gap remains structurally large. [S5]
- June 2026: Debate intensified following analytical pieces noting that for the period 2022-23 to 2025-26, $1.50 flowed out for every $1 of fresh equity inflow. [S5]
- Services sector remains dominant FDI recipient (19% of equity, +40.77% YoY in 2024-25), raising concerns about manufacturing underperformance. [S2]
- Manufacturing FDI declining across three consecutive four-year periods — structural, not cyclical. [S5]
7. Prelims Hooks
- India's net FDI peaked at $44.0 billion in FY 2020-21 before declining sharply. [S5]
- Net FDI fell to less than $1 billion in FY 2024-25, against gross inflows of $81.04 billion. [S2][S5]
- For BoP purposes, net FDI = gross inflows − capital repatriation − outward FDI. [S1]
- India's gross FDI inflows in FY 2025-26 were $94.6 billion, while net FDI was only $7.6 billion. [S5]
- Services sector attracted the highest share of FDI equity in FY 2024-25 — 19% of total inflows. [S2]
- India's FDI liberalisation began with the Statement of Industrial Policy, 1991, targeting technology transfer and export promotion. [S6]
- FIPB (Foreign Investment Promotion Board) was abolished in 2017; approval cases now handled by respective ministries.
- Manufacturing FDI constituted only 10.6% of total effective FDI inflows in the most recent four-year period. [S5]
- India's forex reserves stood at USD 676.3 billion (April 4, 2025), offering ~11 months of import cover. [S3]
- RBI's BoP methodology follows the IMF BPM6 (Balance of Payments Manual, 6th edition) for FDI classification. [S3]
- India's current account deficit was projected at 0.9% of GDP in 2024-25 (up from 0.7% in 2023-24). [S3]
- Between 2022-23 and 2025-26, approximately $1.50 flowed out for every $1 of fresh inward equity capital. [S5]
- FDI in India is regulated under FEMA 1999 (Foreign Exchange Management Act), replacing FERA 1973.
- The Consolidated FDI Policy is issued by DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade), not RBI.
- Gross FDI inflows in FY 2024-25 were USD 81.04 billion, a 14% increase over FY 2023-24's USD 71.28 billion. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper(s): Primarily GS-III; secondary relevance to GS-II
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Indian Economy — investment models, mobilisation of resources, BoP, inclusive growth |
| GS-III | Infrastructure & industrial development; effects of liberalisation on industrial growth |
| GS-II | India's bilateral/multilateral relations; economic diplomacy |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"India's gross FDI inflows have remained robust, yet net FDI has sharply declined. Analyse the structural reasons behind this divergence and its implications for India's external sector sustainability." (GS-III, 15 marks)
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"The original 1991 FDI policy emphasised technology transfer and export promotion. Critically examine how subsequent policy evolution has shifted focus from investment quality to investment volume, and assess the development consequences." (GS-III, 15 marks)
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"Distinguish between greenfield FDI, mergers and acquisitions, and reinvested earnings as modes of foreign direct investment. How does the composition of FDI inflows affect technology transfer and industrial development in a developing economy like India?" (GS-III, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- Balance of Payments (BoP) and Current Account Deficit — Net FDI is a BoP concept; understanding BoP accounting is essential to interpret the data correctly.
- Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999 — the legal framework governing FDI flows, repatriation, and outward investment.
- India's Industrial Policy Evolution (1948–2024) — from licensing raj to FDI liberalisation; contextualises why FDI objectives changed over time.
- Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) and India's Model BIT 2016 — affects investor confidence, capital retention, and dispute resolution.
- Make in India and PLI (Production-Linked Incentive) Schemes — government's attempt to attract manufacturing FDI; contrast with actual manufacturing FDI share data.
- Outward FDI by Indian Companies — growing Indian MNC investments abroad (e.g., Tata, Infosys, Wipro) increase BoP outflows; dual dimension of the net FDI problem.
- Technology Transfer Mechanisms in India — royalty caps, licensing agreements, and JV structures; directly linked to why gross FDI doesn't always mean technology acquisition.
- IMF BPM6 and BoP Statistics — methodological literacy needed to distinguish gross vs. net, equity vs. debt FDI.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Confusing gross FDI with net FDI: PIB/government press releases report gross equity inflows; RBI BoP data reports net FDI. Aspirants often cite the gross figure (e.g., $81 billion) as the definitive measure of FDI health — this is the central analytical trap the article warns against. [S2][S5]
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Assuming all FDI brings technology: M&A-type FDI (acquisition of existing Indian firms) transfers ownership, not necessarily technology or new capacity. Conflating FDI volume with technology acquisition is a common exam error.
-
Wrong nodal ministry: FDI policy is under DPIIT (Ministry of Commerce & Industry) — NOT RBI. RBI handles the forex/BoP accounting. Examiners sometimes test this distinction.
-
FIPB still exists: FIPB was abolished in May 2017. Post-abolition, approval-route FDI goes to respective sectoral ministries/departments. Many aspirants still write FIPB as the approving authority.
-
Treating net FDI decline as purely cyclical: The data shows manufacturing FDI declining across three consecutive four-year periods — this is structural, not a one-time dip. Framing it as a short-term fluctuation misses the deeper policy failure on investment quality. [S5]
11. Sources
- [S1] Foreign Direct Investment, net inflows (BoP, current US$) — India — World Bank Data — https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/BX.KLT.DINV.CD.WD?locations=IN — (Tier 2)
- [S2] "India Records USD 81.04 Billion FDI Inflow in FY 2024–25" — Press Information Bureau (PIB) — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2131716®=3&lang=2 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] IMF Country Report No. 25/54 — India Article IV Consultation 2025 — https://www.imf.org/-/media/files/publications/cr/2025/english/1indea2025001-print-pdf.pdf — (Tier 2)
- [S4] Chapter 4: Balance of Payments — Statistical Year Book India — MoSPI — https://mospi.gov.in/sites/default/files/Statistical_year_book_india_chapters/Chapter%20No.4_0.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] "The Reality Behind Falling Net FDI" — The Hindu BusinessLine, June 11, 2026 (article excerpt supplied as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-11/th_international/articleG6LG3LUMQ-14906859.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S6] Statement of Industrial Policy, 1991 / Role of Foreign Investment in India's New Industrial Policy — India Foundation — https://indiafoundation.in/articles-and-commentaries/role-of-foreign-investment-in-indias-new-industrial-policy/ — (supplementary reference for 1991 objectives)