1. The document presents data on foreign direct investment (FDI) equity inflows to India from January 2000 to June 2017.
2. It breaks down the cumulative total FDI inflows over that period into four categories: inflows through government approval routes, automatic routes, acquisition of existing shares, and various non-resident Indian schemes.
3. The largest amounts of FDI came through the automatic route, totaling over $225 billion, followed by inflows through government approval routes of over $42 billion.
1. The document presents data on foreign direct investment (FDI) equity inflows to India from January 2000 to June 2017.
2. It breaks down the cumulative total FDI inflows over that period into four categories: inflows through government approval routes, automatic routes, acquisition of existing shares, and various non-resident Indian schemes.
3. The largest amounts of FDI came through the automatic route, totaling over $225 billion, followed by inflows through government approval routes of over $42 billion.
1. The document presents data on foreign direct investment (FDI) equity inflows to India from January 2000 to June 2017.
2. It breaks down the cumulative total FDI inflows over that period into four categories: inflows through government approval routes, automatic routes, acquisition of existing shares, and various non-resident Indian schemes.
3. The largest amounts of FDI came through the automatic route, totaling over $225 billion, followed by inflows through government approval routes of over $42 billion.
1. The document presents data on foreign direct investment (FDI) equity inflows to India from January 2000 to June 2017.
2. It breaks down the cumulative total FDI inflows over that period into four categories: inflows through government approval routes, automatic routes, acquisition of existing shares, and various non-resident Indian schemes.
3. The largest amounts of FDI came through the automatic route, totaling over $225 billion, followed by inflows through government approval routes of over $42 billion.
"When Genius Continues To Fail: What We Didn't Learn From Penn Square Bank, Enron, and Chesapeake Energy," by J. C. Whorton, Jr. and Richard S. Shuster
The International Research Center for Energy and Economic Development (ICEED)