Change set
Pick exam & year, then Go.
Question map
Consider the following: 1. Foreign currency convertible bonds 2. Foreign institutional investment with certain conditions 3. Global depository receipts 4. Non-resident external deposits Which of the above can be included in Foreign Direct Investments?
Explanation
The correct answer is Option 1 (1, 2 and 3). This classification is based on the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) guidelines and the Arvind Mayaram Committee recommendations on defining FDI and FPI.
- Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds (FCCBs) and Global Depository Receipts (GDRs): These are considered FDI because they represent foreign investment into the equity capital of an Indian company through hybrid or secondary market instruments issued abroad.
- Foreign Institutional Investment (FII): According to the Mayaram Committee, if an FII invests 10% or more of the post-issue paid-up equity capital of an Indian company, it is reclassified as FDI. Thus, under "certain conditions," FII is included in FDI.
- Non-Resident External (NRE) Deposits: These are classified as Banking Capital under the Capital Account of the Balance of Payments. They represent debt liabilities of the banking system rather than direct investment into the equity of an enterprise, and are therefore excluded from FDI.
PROVENANCE & STUDY PATTERN
Guest previewThis question separates surface-level readers from conceptual thinkers. While books often list FCCBs under 'Debt/ECB', the 'convertible' nature allows them to morph into FDI. The core test is distinguishing 'Investment in Companies' (FDI/FPI) from 'Banking Capital' (NRE Deposits).
This question can be broken into the following sub-statements. Tap a statement sentence to jump into its detailed analysis.
- Explicitly classifies Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds (FCCB) as part of External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs).
- Describes ECBs as commercial loans/debt raised by resident entities from non-resident entities, implying FCCBs are treated as debt instruments.
- Being categorized as ECB (debt) suggests FCCBs are not treated as equity-based FDI.
- Defines FDI in terms of equity: investment through capital instruments in an unlisted Indian company or 10% or more of equity in a listed company.
- Emphasizes equity/ownership threshold as determinant of FDI classification, which debt instruments like bonds do not satisfy.
This tab shows concrete study steps: what to underline in books, how to map current affairs, and how to prepare for similar questions.
Login with Google to unlock study guidance.
Discover the small, exam-centric ideas hidden in this question and where they appear in your books and notes.
Login with Google to unlock micro-concepts.
Access hidden traps, elimination shortcuts, and Mains connections that give you an edge on every question.
Login with Google to unlock The Vault.
SIMILAR QUESTIONS
5 Cross-Linked PYQs
UPSC repeats concepts across years. Login to see how this question connects to 5 others.
Login with Google