Relevance: GS III (Economy – External Sector & Mobilization of Resources) | Source: The Hindu / Business Standard
1. The Context: A “Negative” Hat-Trick
India’s external sector is facing a double whammy. For the third consecutive month (November 2025), Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has witnessed a Net Outflow.
- The Trend: While money is coming in (Gross Inflows), a lot more is going out.
- The Fallout: This capital flight has put immense pressure on the currency, dragging the Indian Rupee to a fresh all-time low of 91.75 against the US Dollar.
2. The Concept: Why is FDI “Negative”?
It is crucial to distinguish between Gross and Net FDI.
- The Math: $\text{Net FDI} = \text{Gross Inflows} – (\text{Repatriation} + \text{Outward FDI})$
- What Happened: Although foreign investors brought in $6.41 billion, existing investors took out $5.34 billion (repatriating profits/capital), and Indian companies invested $1.51 billion overseas. This imbalance resulted in a negative figure.
3. Why is Capital Leaving? (The “Onshoring” Shift)
The Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) highlighted a structural shift causing this “exodus”:
- Onshoring: Developed nations (like the US and EU) are no longer just outsourcing; they are actively trying to bring supply chains back home (“Localisation”). India is now competing with rich nations for investment, not just developing peers.
- Global Interest Rates: High interest rates in the US make “safe assets” (like US Treasury Bonds) more attractive than risky emerging markets like India.
- Invest to Sell: Indian companies are investing abroad not just to expand, but to bypass trade barriers and sell in foreign markets.
UPSC Value Box
Concept / Term | Relevance for Prelims |
| Repatriation | The process of converting foreign currency (profits/capital) back into the currency of one’s own country. High repatriation exerts downward pressure on the Rupee (selling INR to buy USD). |
| Onshoring vs. Offshoring | Offshoring: Moving business to low-cost countries (Old Trend). Onshoring: Bringing business back to the home country (New Trend driven by security concerns). |
| FPI vs. FDI | FDI: Long-term, stable investment (building factories). FPI: Short-term, volatile investment (buying stocks/bonds). Currently, both are seeing outflows. |
Q. With reference to the Balance of Payments, the term “Net Foreign Direct Investment (Net FDI)” turns negative when:
- The Gross FDI inflows are zero.
- The outflow of capital due to repatriation and outward investment exceeds the gross inflows.
- Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) sell more equities than they buy.
- The country’s currency depreciates by more than 5% in a quarter.
Correct Answer: (2)
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