Foreign Doubtful Investment

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| Nor has the debate focused on the weak framework that prevails when it comes to foreign investment rules. With the notable exceptions of banking and insurance, the foreign investment norms in almost every other sector are administered through government notifications and through Press Notes. As is evident, a government notification stipulating a certain foreign investment limit for (say) the telecom sector can be changed by another government notification, which can be done overnight and with little or no debate. All that is required is a decision by the Cabinet. However, changing the investment limits for the banking and insurance industries is not as easy, since these require amendments to specific laws, and this can be a long-drawn and difficult process in the era of coalition governments. Instead of continuing with this ad hoc approach, it would be best to have an over-arching law governing all foreign investment. |
| The government's response to criticism on this score is that it is a signatory to the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Association, so foreign investors should not be apprehensive""but that is addressing an altogether different issue. The fact is that there have been dozens of "Press Notes" since 1991 on all manner of policy issues. Not being laws duly debated in Parliament and recorded in the statute books, these "Notes" allow the government to take ad hoc decisions. While these Press Notes have the virtue of speed over the cumbersome process of law-making, they do add to uncertainty. Also, unlike a law that justifies what follows through a preamble, Press Notes do not possess such transparency. The Cabinet resolution of 1955 on foreign investment in the print media was not even an accessible document since Cabinet proceedings are supposed to be secret; ironically, this was overturned after half a century without any real debate in Parliament (though there was substantial debate outside that forum). Indeed, an umbrella enactment should be used to make the entire set of foreign investment rules as liberal as possible; at a time when outbound investment by Indian companies is in the same ball-park range as inbound investment, there is little reason for the defensiveness of the past. |
First Published: Jul 19 2007 | 12:00 AM IST