An Empirical Analysis of Impact of FDI on India’s GDP

13 Pages Posted: 20 Oct 2020

See all articles by Sakshi Kumari

Sakshi Kumari

Independent

Teboho Theketsa

Independent

Rohit Kumar

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Date Written: March 28, 2020

Abstract

The initial entry of FDI in India can be loosely considered from the time of establishment of East India Company of Britain during the colonial era in the 17th century due to the British merchants approaching the Mughal Emperor with the proposal of establishing a factory in Surat city of India. Along with them the British brought on the Industrial revolution to India which led to development of transportation (Railways and Roadways) and communication systems albeit for their benefits.

As India is a developing country, capital has been one of the scarce resources that are usually required for economic development. Capital is limited and there are many issues such as Health, poverty, employment, education, research and development, technology obsolescence, global competition. The flow of FDI in India from across the world will help in acquiring the funds at cheaper cost, better technology, employment generation, and upgraded technology transfer, scope for more trade, linkages and spillovers to domestic firms.

Keywords: Fdi, Gdp, India, 2020, Impact, Need, Economic, Empirical Analysis, Equity, Foreign Direct Investment, Trends, Regression Analysis, Coefficient of R Square, Labour

JEL Classification: E63, E1, E22, E25, E41, E52, F10, F31, F65, F66, F61, F62, F63

Suggested Citation

Kumari, Sakshi and Theketsa, Teboho and Kumar, Rohit, An Empirical Analysis of Impact of FDI on India’s GDP (March 28, 2020). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3682854 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3682854

Teboho Theketsa

Independent ( email )

Rohit Kumar

affiliation not provided to SSRN

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