FDI inflows dip by 25 p.c. in January

March 10, 2010 04:47 pm | Updated 04:47 pm IST - New Delhi

Foreign direct investment in the country declined by 25 per cent to USD 2.04 billion in January compared to the same month last year, snapping a trend of positive growth in the previous three consecutive months.

“There is no specific reason why the inflows in January dipped,” an official said. When asked, he further said India’s total FDI by the end of 2009-10, will not be more than last fiscal’s.

In January 2009, FDI inflows were USD 2.73 billion.

India attracted foreign direct investment of USD 2.33 billion in October 2009, about 56 per cent up over the same month last year, while in November FDI surged by 60 per cent to USD 1.73 billion.

The FDI increased by 13 per cent to USD 1.54 billion in December from USD 1.36 billion in the year-ago period.

In 2008-09, India received USD 27.3 billion FDI, higher than USD 24.5 billion in 2007-08.

During April-January 2009-10, the foreign inflows declined by about 4 per cent to USD 22.96 billion from USD 23.86 billion in the corresponding period last year, the official said.

“The major sectors that received FDI include services, computer software and hardware, telecommunications and housing and real estate,” the official said.

CRISIL’s Principal Economist D.K. Joshi also maintained that “it would be difficult for the country to attract more FDI than what it received during 2008-09.”

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