
London: Foreign
Direct Investment into India has surged to
over USD 25 billion in 2007-08 and the country's
Foreign Exchange Reserve crossed USD 341 billion
as of today, Ashwani Kumar, Minister of State
for Commerce and Industry has said.
Addressing the two-day
India Investors' Summit organised by Financial
News in association with Dow Jones and The
Wall Street Journal, Ashwani Kumar highlighted
the initiatives of the UPA government in making
growth more inclusive and the emphasis laid
on education and health in the context of
providing skills and better quality of life.
He said the next wave
would be in the skill-based manufacturing
sector. Nearly 500 delegates from business
and industry registered for the event which
discussed the current social, financial and
economic dynamics of doing business with India.
Ashwani Kumar gave a
background to the reform process in India
and the key drivers of India's growth.
To support his argument
of the sustainability of GDP growth of over
8 per cent in the long run, he observed that
India had the advantage of a huge young workforce
(24 per cent of the population are below the
age of 28 years, 54 per cent of the population
are in the working group) and a very high
savings and investment rate (over 35 per cent
of GDP).
Domestic demand and investment
are the key drivers of growth and therefore
insulate the Indian economy to a large extent
from the sub-prime crisis.
Inflation, though a major
concern, could be contained. The growth potential
of services sector in India was enormous at
USD 200 billion offering employment to 40
million people, he said.