New Delhi: The Defence Ministry has suggested raising the cap in FDI in defence sector to 49 per cent from 26 per cent now to help in developing partnerships between Indian and foreign military hardware manufacturing firms.
The Ministry is in favour of allowing 49 per cent FDI in defence sector through the approval route, Defence Ministry officials said.
The suggestion has come soon after the Commerce and Industry Ministry circulated a Cabinet note for inter- ministerial consultation to allow raising of FDI limit to 100 per cent through the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) route.
The stand taken by the Defence Ministry is in line with the promises made by BJP during election campaign and Prime Minister Narendra Modi's assertion to expand the domestic defence industrial manufacturing base in the country.
India opened up the defence equipment industry to private
sector in May 2001, but restricted foreign participation to 26 per cent in this capital-intensive and sensitive sector.
India is one of the largest defence importers in the world with a minuscule component of exports and ranks among the top ten countries in terms of military expenditure.
“The bulk of the domestic production is met either through the Ordnance Factories or the Defence PSUs. Even when defence products are manufactured domestically, there is a large component of imported sub-systems,” the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) had said.
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