India has emerged as the most attractive investment destination in the world for the next three years, as per a survey by Global consultancy firm EY. Thirty-two per cent of business leaders from global corporations polled for the survey said India is the best for investment purposes, followed by China, Southeast Asia and Brazil. DIPP Secretary Amitabh Kant said, “The finding reconfirms and reaffirms many other recent findings,” at the launch of the report.
He said the study gives clarity on the fact that there was an increased focus and emphasis on manufacturing and India's growth in terms of FDI would be driven by manufacturing. “India must continue the reform process on a sustained basis over a long period of time,” Kant said, adding that the challenge for India is to grow at rapid rate of 9 to 10 per cent per annum year after year for three decades or more. “The Prime Minister has set us a challenge of taking India to the top 50 position on the World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business in the next three years. “We will marginally improve (our ranking) this year… We will substantially improve next year but in the third year we will definitely reach top 50,” Kant pointed out. “We continue to attract investments across and it is important that India becomes a part of the global supply chain. We are pushing for new bankruptcy laws, easier entry and exit. The Vishwananthan Committee will give its recommendation this month and take it forward so that there are easy entry and exit norms,” he said. Adding, “Much has been talked about the tax regime, the lack of consistency but we have taken several decisive steps. The Prime Minister has gone on record to say that India will not resort to retrospective tax.”
The survey titled 'Ready, set, grow' was conducted during March and April, and includes views of over 500 decision-makers from multinational organisations across sectors like industrials, automotive, consumer products, life sciences, infrastructure and technology, among others. It finds major gains in perception as compared to the findings of the 2014 survey in key areas such as macroeconomic stability (up from 70% in 2014 to 76% in 2015), political and social stability (up from 59% to 74%); relaxation in FDI policy (up from 60% to 68%); and the government’s efforts to ease doing business (up from 57% in 2014 to 67% in 2015).