OpinionIndia’s reopening to Chinese investment reflects strategic pragmatism
Concerns about signalling weakness misread India’s careful policy design. Foreign investment rules have not been abolished, only recalibrated

In April 2020, as the world struggled with the Covid-19 pandemic and soldiers from India and China moved towards a large-scale border stand-off, New Delhi amended its foreign direct investment (FDI) policy to require prior government approval for all investments from countries sharing a land border with India – a measure directed at China.
India’s lifting of the FDI restrictions, announced on March 10, is a measured but significant signal that it is willing to follow diplomatic optimism with economic pragmatism.
The revised guidelines establish a two-tier framework. Investments by Chinese entities of up to 10 per cent ownership can now proceed automatically, in line with applicable sectoral caps. For strategic sectors such as capital goods, electronics and the upstream solar supply chain including polysilicon and ingot-wafers, FDI will continue to require government approval. But decisions will be fast-tracked within 60 days. Crucially, majority ownership in these sectors must remain with Indian entities.
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