It also said that despite subdued global
trends dictating the course of Foreign
Direct Investment (FDI) flows to India lately, the country
continues to chart its way forward and remain a preferred destination.
The FDI inflows were 2.5% of GDP in FY15-23 as against 2.2% in FY
FY05-14, it said.
Highlighting that though the export mix,
in terms of the principal commodity classification, has not “changed much” over
the years, the ministry said: “There has
been progressive diversification in India’s export basket, and there is scope
for adding more quality and complexity to exports, given the existing
capabilities”.
As per the review, in terms of absolute
numbers, the pick-up in total exports (merchandise plus services) has been
evident since FY22, when it reached $683.7 billion, followed by $781.4 billion
in FY23. On average, the share of net exports to GDP improved to (-)2.6% in
FY14-24 from (-)4.1% during FY04-13.
“India’s exports have been showing
remarkable performance, logging record-high levels since FY22, with merchandise
exports rising by more than 50% and services exports by 120% over the past
decade (FY13-23),” it said.
The highest-ever merchandise export of
$451.1 billion was achieved in FY23. However, the pace of growth moderated in
FY23 due to persisting geopolitical tensions.
India has a target of $2 trillion
exports by 2030.
On FDI front, the ministry said that
India is a large pull factor for foreign investments due to its young
workforce, large middle-class population, progressively transparent and liberal
measures, and policies such as the production-linked incentive scheme
and Make in India.
“It is creditable that despite the shock of the
pandemic and conflict in Europe, India’s FDI inflows were higher in this period
than in the earlier period, which was marked
by a global economic and capital flow boom,” it said.
The CAGR for FDI in India during FY13-23
was 28%.