Prime Minister Narendra Modi renewed his call yesterday for firms to invest in India and turn it into a global manufacturing hub, painting the country as a bright spot for investment in an uncertain world economy.
The prime minister was addressing a gathering of industry leaders, CEOs and foreign dignitaries in the commercial capital Mumbai to mark the start of Make in India week, which runs until February 18.
The glitzy showcase is part of a drive to convince foreign firms to take advantage of cheap Indian labour and invest in factories in the country as rising wages make traditional hubs more expensive.
“This campaign has the capacity to boost India’s economy and also brighten the global scenario,” Modi said.
“This century is Asia’s century. My advice to you is to make India your centre if you want this century to be your century,” he said.
Modi faces a huge challenge in persuading foreign companies - many of which still eye India’s labyrinthine bureaucracy, complex regulations and poor infrastructure with suspicion - to invest in the country.
He is seeking to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) into 25 key sectors, from traditional industries such as leather goods to high-skill areas such as defence manufacturing.
In the speech yesterday, he said FDI had increased 48% since his government took power in May 2014, with December recording the highest monthly inflows ever.
The prime minister also listed a number of initiatives taken by the government to make it easier for doing business in India, along with enabling policy decisions and corrections. “I repeat, we also decided there will be no retrospective taxation,” he said.
Modi said India was particularly keen on scaling up investments in infrastructure - from roads and railways to digital networks and clean energy. Towards this, he said, interest-free bonds were the next on the agenda.
“Do not wait. Do not relax. You should take advantage of the immense opportunities in India.”
Earlier in the day Modi met with foreign leaders including Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven and Finland’s Prime Minister Juha Sipila and officials from Germany, Japan and Poland.
The chief minister of Maharashtra, Devendra Fadnavis, said in a speech he sought to turn Mumbai into an international financial services centre, describing his state as a national powerhouse of FDI.
Indian officials often lament their country missing the boat on manufacturing, while China’s drive to skill its vast, low-wage workforce to make goods for the West powered its economic boom.
India’s gross domestic product grew 7.3% in the third fiscal quarter, year-on year, according to statistics ministry data published on Monday, retaining its place as the fastest-growing major economy in the world.


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