Showing posts with label India Special. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India Special. Show all posts

Thursday, December 13, 2012

The life of Annapurna Devi - The stuff of Legends

Posting below an article from the Indian Express by Suanshu Khurana called 'Notes from behind a locked door' about the forgotten by most but a legend among the musically literate - Annapurna Devi; unfortunately always known by most as the ex-wife of Pandit Ravi Shankar and not as a musical legend in her own right when she definitely is one.

I am putting this story here for myself more than others to remind me of this lady and her simplicity and musical genius.

Read on for the story (Link):


------ A gifted musician who chose obscurity. A recluse in her Mumbai apartment for 50 years. That’s Annapurna Devi, Ravi Shankar’s first wife, Anoushka Shankar’s and Norah Jones’s stepmother, and she has an extraordinary story to tell. Only, she wouldn’t meet a reporter, or anyone, and she wouldn’t take a phone call.
So Suanshu Khurana wrote her a long letter, and Annapurna Devi wrote back, on her life, on her husband and on why she never believed in recording her music.
There, on the sixth floor of that tall building on Warden Road, south Mumbai, is where she lives. Some say she is a musician, though neighbours cannot be sure. They have hardly seen her. The stillness around her apartment stirs only at night, when a hand plucks notes from a deep-throated sitar. A board nailed to the door is the only allowance to the world outside and it declines all intrusion: ‘The door will not be opened on Mondays and Fridays. Please ring the bell only thrice. If no one opens, please leave your name and address. Thank you.
Inconvenience is regretted’.
Only a few come this far, dogged music lovers who heard, on a cold winter morning, a scratched record of Annapurna Devi playing Raga Kaushiki and could never forget. Those who heard spoken in hushed awe, at baithaks and mehfils, the legend of the only surbahar player in the world, and were moved to seek an audience. Daughter and disciple of the musical genius who founded the Maihar gharana, Ustad Alauddin Khan; sister of sarod maestro Ustad Ali Akbar Khan; the first wife of Pandit Ravi Shankar; and a musician whose mastery over a little-known, demanding instrument is the stuff of lore.
This is the closest one can get to her. Over half a century ago, Annapurna Devi shuttered her music in silence, refusing all recordings, all concerts. Nothing has been important enough to draw her out. Not the Padma Bhushan, awarded to her in 1977, which had to be delivered to her home. Not offers of recordings or concerts. Not the overtures from the best musicians. In an age of manic self-advertisement, she achieved the unthinkable—freed herself of the need for an audience.
So when I write to her, requesting a meeting, I am trying for the impossible. There is no e-mail address, no fax number where I can reach her. Apt, I think, as I walk to the post office, a hand-written letter clutched in my hand — here it is, for what it is worth, my message to an artist lost to the world, through the lost medium of letters. My only hope is Sahana Gupta, her grand-niece, with whom I have been in touch with for the past year now.
Three weeks later, a letter arrives, written by a Rajan Vathiyath, with a message: ‘She is an extremely private person and doesn’t do any personal interviews. Since you have come through Ms Gupta, she will answer your questions if you write to her.’
Suddenly, there is a crack in the door.
I write back, with a set of questions and wait for her reply. A month and a half passes before a yellow envelope lands at my address. Inside is a six-page long, double spaced, neatly typed response, on a letterhead that reads ‘Padmabhushan Dr Annapurna Devi’. The black letters seem impersonal, holding back even the traces of her handwriting. “I do really live in my flat 365 days a year and I do have instructions on my door requesting people not to disturb me. However, within my flat, I do live a very normal life. I only go out when I require some medical care like eye check-ups, dental treatments etc,” she writes.
The sentences are short, the idiom unadorned, but the effect is powerful—like the inward, brooding notes of the surbahar—especially when she talks of her father, Ustad Alauddin Khan. ‘Baba’ towers over all the stories she tells of her life and of Maihar, a small town near Jabalpur, home to her childhood and rigorous schooling in music. “I always remember Baba with respect, awe and love. I had shraddha in him from my very childhood..He used to say that every note you play should touch one’s soul. I practice what he taught me as a form of meditation or prayer,” she writes.
There she is, a ten-year-old, drawn inexorably to the tanpura that her father kept away from her. Khan had seen what bitterness it brought for his elder daughter Jahanara, whose in-laws refused to let her sing. “He was in a dilemma whether to teach me or not. But I used to listen to and remember what he taught Dada (Ustad Ali Akbar Khan). One day when Baba went to the market, Dada was practising his lessons on the sarod. Dada suddenly made a mistake and I started correcting him. I was so involved that I did not notice that Baba had returned. And then suddenly I became aware of his presence—he was standing right behind me. I was scared,” she writes. “But instead of scolding me, Baba called me to his room and gave me a tanpura. This was the beginning of my taleem.”
Khan was “exacting, a purist and a perfectionist”, more guru than doting father, famous for a fierce and unpredictable temper. “While I was a student, I never dared ask Baba what his favourite ragas were, nor did he ever speak about his performances. All my time was spent in learning and practising,” she writes. “He encouraged his students to imbue the music with their own feelings. That is why the same phrase played by Dada and Pandit Ravi Shankar would sound different.”
She began by learning the sitar but her father had chosen a different path for her—one that was strikingly opposite to the trajectory of his other famous student, Ravi Shankar. He asked Annapurna to play the surbahar or the bass sitar, a pensive, more meditative version of the sitar. “He told me, ‘I feel that you can preserve my guru’s gift because you love music. However, you will have to give up playing the sitar, an instrument liked by connoisseurs as well as the commoners. The surbahar on the other hand will be appreciated only by discerning listeners who understand the depth of music. The commoners might throw tomatoes at you. So what is your decision?’ I was dumbfounded,” she writes. She assented, of course. “And now, whenever I play the instrument I experience a feeling of surrender, compassion and peace,” she writes.
Only four years of taleem and Annapurna blossomed as a performer. Around that time, dancer Uday Shankar proposed marriage between younger brother Ravi and Annapurna. She was only 15. Shankar was 21. But Khan agreed to the match with his much-loved student, despite that it would be a Hindu-Muslim marriage, a rarity in those days. “Baba was deeply religious but ecumenical in spirit. He worshipped Sharda Ma and also read his namaz five times a day. He was the most secular individual I have known. I did not become Annapurna after marriage. I was born on Chaiti Purnima (a full moon day) and the Maharaja of Maihar, Brijnath Singh, named me Annapurna,” she writes. Her Muslim name was Roshanara.
A son was born to Shankar and Annapurna soon after their marriage in 1942. But the relationship was not meant to survive. She was the introverted traditionalist keeping her father’s austere legacy alive, who spurned concerts and recordings, indeed all audience. The one recording that exists of her playing Raag Maand Khamaj was “surreptitiously made”, she tells us. He revelled in the showmanship of modern performance, bending rules to making his music more audience-friendly, and would go on to become an international superstar. She doesn’t dwell on their troubled marriage in this letter, except to say she is not in touch with ‘Panditji’ or his daughters—Anoushka Shankar and Norah Jones. Two words dismiss questions of their differences: ‘No comment’.
But in an answer to another question, she seems to sum up the difference between the two. “Emotional and aesthetic expression have more to do with the artiste’s personality. An introspective artiste might go for sur and alaap while an extrovert might opt for leyakari,” she writes.
More than musical styles came between Ravi Shankar and his wife. There were his rumoured dalliances. Two years after their marriage, he was drawn to his brother’s sister-in-law Kamala. Shankar and Annapurna had just moved to Mumbai when the affair blossomed. An enraged Annapurna returned to Maihar with her son. In Ravi Shankar: An Autobiography, Shankar wrote, “This was first time in my marriage that I had become deeply attracted to somebody else. Annapurna doubted me with everyone anyway. So it was nothing new for her to doubt me with Kamala—only this time it was true. I was not in a state to think reasonably. Perhaps the moment reason set in, love frayed at the edges. She is so gifted! But she has a tremendous temper. Like her father. And at that time even I was very ill-tempered. So we both would flare up together….”
Annapurna eventually returned to her husband in Mumbai but the following years were equally turbulent. “By 1956, there were many problems in our marriage and in January there was a serious breakdown,” writes Shankar. They divorced in 1962, when Annapurna retreated into her Mumbai flat to teach a handful of students. “Baba had told me, that if ever the need arose, I would be able to earn my living through music and be economically independent,” she writes.
Barring a few performances with Panditji, she refused to play for the public or record her music. Only a couple of grainy videos of her performing float around on YouTube. There are a handful of rare recordings with a few collectors. “Personally I did not enjoy performing... For me music has always been my offering to God. I never felt comfortable recording it,” she says.
Like her father, it’s as a guru that she identifies herself now—among her famous students are Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia and Nikhil Banerjee. “I don’t feel I have deprived people of my music since I freely taught whatever I learnt from Baba to my disciples,” she writes. She teaches her small class the sitar, the flute, the sarod and vocal music though not the surbahar— they are not even manufactured anymore.
Legend has it that she teaches only after midnight and her sessions last till dawn. Sarod player Pradeep Kumar Barot, 57, who has been learning from her for the past 35 years, says, “I consider myself blessed. There are not many who get to have Ma as their guru. In spite of being such a great musician, she is so simple and warm.” To her grand-niece Sahana, she is an “extremely warm” person who “loves spending time with my kids”. To students like Barot, she is a demanding teacher, who on rare occasions “makes Bengali-style fish curry” for them.
In 1982, she married her student Rooshi Kumar Pandya, 13 years younger than her. “Pandya ji has been taking care of me since our marriage. I am alive and able to teach because of him all these years. I don’t think I would have lived this long without his care,” she writes.
Pandya, who has helped much of this interview take place, tells us of their relationship. “I met her in 1974,” he says. “I was learning from Ali Akbar Khan sahab in the US but then I had to shift to India because of work. So to make sure that I continued my taleem, he told me to learn from his sister.” He came to Mumbai and learnt music from her for almost eight years before asking her to marry him. “When I thought of asking her to marry me, I did feel a little anxious. But we both were single. I knew that the risk was that she will not teach me again. When I asked her, she said that she has been hurt before and it is a difficult decision for her. But she agreed after four days,” says Pandya. She is still a guru to him, he adds.
In 1992, her son from her first marriage, Shubhendra, a sitar player who performed often with Pandit Ravi Shankar, died of intestinal problems in the US with none of his parents by his side. “Shubho’s death was a great shock to me and I think it could have been prevented,” she writes. Shubhendra’s children Som and Kaveri Shankar who are now settled with their mother in the US also visit her sometimes. “Shubho’s daughter Kaveri is a Bharatnatayam dancer. She came and stayed with me for a few days and we immensely enjoyed each other’s company,” she writes.
To my question if she would like to perform ever again, she says a firm no. Could I meet her once, not as a journalist but as a musician? “Please forgive me but I don’t think so since I don’t meet anybody.”
This is Annapurna Devi then, a spare life, pared of people and distractions, immersed in her Baba’s learning. “I am at peace when I am teaching a few of my students or when I am practicing or feeding pigeons,” she writes.
That’s the image I’d like to depart with, the artist of a forgotten world, who lives in the shadows, but imperiously, on her own terms. But of this I am sure, come midnight, she will make her surbahar weep, for the gods she left behind in Maihar.--------

Links to some of her Music: Annapurna Devi Music on Parrikar.Org 

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Micro-Irrigation scheme guidelines in India; Steps required for the subsidies program

Guidelines for the Micro Irrigation (MI) scheme as set up by the Central government of India:
  • Subsidy of 50% of the cost of the MI system to be provided to the beneficiary.
  • Subsidy will be split between the Central government – 40% and the State Government – at least 10% while the rest would be paid by the beneficiary.
  • The maximum area covered is 5 Hectares per family.
  • At least 25% of the planned allocation for a district has to be small and marginal farmers.
  • The Panchayati Raj institutions will be involved in the selection of the beneficiaries. They will be represented on the board of the State Micro irrigation committee which will be the arm of the state government in overseeing the scheme.
  • This scheme covers both Drip and Sprinkler irrigation systems. However, Sprinkler systems will be given due consideration only if drip irrigation systems are found to be uneconomical.
  • The implementing Agency (IA) will be appointed by the State government while the Central government will release the funds for the scheme as planned. IA will forward action plans through SMIC.
  • Payment to the farmer/ beneficiary will be in the form of a crossed cheque. The Supplier will be paid by the farmer/ beneficiary.
  • The Manufacturers will have to register with the State Micro irrigation committee to be allowed to supply equipment to the farmers. Further, the equipment must be BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards) certified.
  • The estimated cost of installing drip irrigation systems are as follows. The estimates are as of 2006 in Indian Rupees. This has to be taken as a guideline for installing systems.
Spacing (Metre)


Area, (hectares)



0.4
1
2
3
4
5
12x12
10600
16700
25200
32600
53700
71300
10x10
12100
18000
27700
36000
57900
76900
9x9
12400
22100
35500
55900
61400
81100
8x8
12900
19900
31300
41700
65500
86200
6x6
14400
30200
51200
70300
105800
137400
5x5
15100
32800
56600
83100
117100
150800
4x4
16900
39300
63100
100700
142200
179300
3x3
17900
35600
71400
96100
130800
158300
3x1.5
19700
40200
80500
109700
146100
180900
2.5x2.5
20000
39800
81400
111200
199500
239600
2x2
21300
49800
86400
122700
164900
223400
1.5x1.5
26100
55000
109500
165100
205900
281000
1x1
26500
57600
96500
146500
199900
249200
  •  These estimates are further split into 3 categories as per existing demand and network. This depends on level of awareness, proximity to manufacturing units, distance in transportation, and cost of drip irrigation systems. The costs would be estimated for the zones as follows.
Category
Estimates
States Covered
A
Cost as mentioned above
Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu & Maharashtra
B
15% higher than Category A
All others except A & the Himalayan belt states
C
25% higher than Category A
NE States, Sikkim, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir, Uttarakhand
  • Scheme covers crops like fruit, vegetables, potato, onion and other tuber crops, spices, medicinal and aromatic plants and all other plantation crops except tea, coffee, rubber and oil palm.
  • For small farm holdings, a group of farmers would be encouraged to avail the benefits of drip irrigation through a common water source up to a maximum of 5 Ha per grouping.
  • In case of Inter-cropping, the farmer decides on the crop and therefore the spacing to be used for cost calculations.
  • Power and Water source requirements as specified by the government have to be met for the subsidy to be sanctioned.
  • The manufacturers need to register with the state government by paying a fee of INR 50,000 per annum. This fee will be used for promoting micro irrigation schemes in the state.
Installation process guidelines will be as follows:
  1. IA will provide list of suppliers to farmers.
  2. Supplier will assess crop water requirement, prepare a cost estimate and submit that to the IA which will be approved by the IA as per requirements.
  3. Beneficiary will make the payment to the supplier as per the cost estimate decided.
  4. After satisfactory installation of system, the IA will release payment to the beneficiary through a crossed cheque or demand draft.
  5. IA ensures that subsidy is paid within a month from the date of installation of the system.
  6. BIS and other quality assurance officials to make frequent inspection of systems to ensure quality.

Reference: http://agricoop.nic.in

Microfinance Industry in India specific to Indian agricultural needs; an Industry Analysis

The MFI industry in India has shown strong growth in the past few years with an upward movement from $0.8 billion in outstanding loans in 2006 to $6.7 billion in 2010. This, along with the strong support of the Indian government for micro-finance, indicates that the industry will continue to see significant growth in the future. Currently, there are more than 3,000 MFIs in India and the 10 biggest organizations represent 75% of the market. This data, the potential growth opportunity, and the size of the untapped market (only 5% of people in Uttarakhand have access to microfinance) suggest that entering this market will be feasible and potentially rewarding (social and financial). In order to be successful within this industry, an organization needs to be well financed and needs to overcome barriers including trust and acceptance of customers.

The major MFI competitors in India include Bharatiya Samruddhi Finance Limited, Share Microfin Ltd, Sa-Dhan Ltd, SKS Microfinance Ltd., International Development Enterprises (IDE), Bandhan and Gram Utthan. While these pan India organizations provide financial assistance to rural areas, they are primarily focused on urban communities; further, their missions are broad and do not specifically cater to the needs of agricultural customers for capital intensive projects. The ticket sizes for loans by the existing MFI’s are considerably lower, have very short payback period and are hence not suitable for capital intensive projects like Micro irrigation. This is especially true for states in north India including Uttarakhand. Further, there is a problem with bank loans as they require collaterals like agricultural land for the loan to be provided.

Additional competitors include other financial service providers, including local Indian commercial and development banks as well as self help groups, cooperatives, and other community savings and loan programs. Some agricultural input suppliers are also beginning to offer financial services and credit for inputs to agriculture. However overall the niche of agricultural financing that we will focus on is very much in its infancy and has a huge untapped potential. 

Microfinance lenders hold the majority of the power due to the extreme needs of customers requiring financial assistance. With the maturation of the microfinance industry, borrowers have started getting the ability to obtain loans from multiple organizations, though even now with the tremendous demand and limited amount of money to lend; this ability is not significant in most parts of the country.  

There is also a problem of supplier network for Drip Irrigation systems in India which further increases the cost of supplying such systems. In fact, the Indian government has identified the areas where this is a problem in categorizing the country in 3 categories of A, B, C with higher levels of estimated cost of drip irrigation systems in B & C to the tune of 15% and 25% higher respectively. These higher increases are due to the problems of farmer awareness levels, proximity to the manufacturing units, distance in transportation, and cost of drip irrigation systems itself. 

Friday, December 2, 2011

Kya Khayal Hai by Zeb, Haniya, Sawanand & Shantanu (Dewarists)

Came across this new group called Zeb & Haniya (2 cousins from Pakistan) with really soulful voices, singing the most beautiful original melodies I have heard in some time. Their collaboration with Sawanand Kirkire and Shantanu Moitra for the song 'Kya Khayal Hai' on 'Dewarists' was just superb!

Click to check out the episode here - LINK

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Sector specific guidelines for FDI in India

Source: 2011 Investment Climate Statement – India; U.S. Department of State

I was searching for FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) regulations in India for a project submission and came across the data as part of the Investment Climate Statement that the U.S. Department of State maintains on its website. Thought it would be helpful for all to list this in one place considering the brouhaha happening right now in India over the provision of 51% FDI in multi-brand retail (likes of Walmart, Tesco, Metro etc). It also gives an indication to how difficult the situation is for investors in India due to the sheer complexity of rules and regulations.

2 routes to investing in India:
(i) Automatic Route (e.g., coal and lignite mining, power, industrial parks, petroleum and gas, and non-banking finance) – Only notification to RBI required
(ii) Government Route – Prior approval is required from government before investment (e.g., defence, broadcasting and media, and private banks)

Approving entity different:
(i) DIPP – Single brand retailing proposals, NRI investors, Overseas corporate bodies
(ii) Department of Commerce – Export oriented units
(iii) Foreign Investment Protection Board – All others

1. Advertising and Film: One hundred percent FDI via the automatic route is allowed in the advertising and film industries, which includes film production, exhibition, and distribution, and related services and products.

2. Agriculture: No FDI is permitted in farming except tea plantations. Foreigners are not authorized to own farmland. FDI in agriculture-related activities like the seed industry, floriculture, horticulture, animal husbandry, aquaculture, fish farming, and cultivation of vegetables and mushrooms is permitted without limits under the automatic route. For tea plantations, 100 percent FDI is allowed via the government route. However, there is a compulsory divestment of 26 percent equity in favor of the Indian partner or potential Indian investors within five years from the date FDI enters the country. In other plantation sectors, no FDI is allowed.

3. Airport Infrastructure: One hundred percent FDI is allowed in greenfield projects through the automatic route. FDI up to 74 percent is allowed in existing projects through the automatic route; greater than 74 percent requires FIPB approval. Foreign companies can own up to 74 percent of the ground-handling businesses at airports with 49 percent through the automatic route and FDI in excess of 49 percent to 74 percent permitted via the government route. NRIs are allowed 100 percent FDI in ground-handling services. One hundred percent FDI is allowed through the automatic route for maintenance and repair operations, flight training institutes, and technical training institutes.

4. Airport Transport Services: FDI is limited to 49 percent under the automatic route for air transport services, including domestic scheduled passenger airlines. For non-scheduled, chartered, cargo airlines, the FDI limit is 74 percent. For helicopter and seaplane services, 100 percent FDI is allowed on automatic approval (meaning FIPB is not involved) but requires formal approval by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation. NRIs may own 100 percent of a domestic airline. Although frequently debated, India has yet to open its state-run international airlines to outside investment. The U.S.-India “Open Skies” agreement, signed in April 2005, allows unrestricted access by U.S. carriers to the Indian market and vice versa.

5. Alcoholic Distillation and Brewing: One hundred percent FDI is allowed through the automatic route but still requires a license via DIPP under the provisions of the Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951.

6. Asset Reconstruction Companies: FDI is limited to 49 percent via the government route. No portfolio investments are allowed. Where any individual investment exceeds 10 percent of the equity, the approval is subject to the Securitization and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002.

7. Automobiles: No FDI caps, local content requirements, or export obligations apply. FDI in automobile manufacturing is allowed under the automatic approval route.

8. Banking: Aggregate foreign investment (from all sources) in all private banks is capped at 74 percent. For state-owned banks, the foreign ownership limit is percent. There are four distinct ways foreign investors can enter the Indian banking sector. The first is by a foreign bank establishing a branch in India. A second alternative is to establish a wholly owned subsidiary. Foreign banks are permitted to have either branches or subsidiaries but not both. A third and least likely method is for a foreign entity to acquire an ailing bank. However, the RBI has yet to authorize this type of transaction. Lastly, foreign institutional investors (FII) can invest in a bank up to 10% of the total paid up capital and 5% in case the FII is a foreign bank/bank group.
Voting rights in private banks and state owned banks are currently capped at 10 percent and 1 percent, respectively, and do not represent ownership. The Banking Regulation (Amendment) bill, which would align voting rights in private banks with shareholding, continues to be with a committee in Parliament and has yet to be introduced.

9. Broadcasting: Foreign investment (including, FDI, NRI persons of Indian origin and portfolio investment) is limited to 20 percent in frequency modulation terrestrial broadcasting, with prior government approval, subject to guidelines issued by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. For direct-to-home broadcasting, foreign investment from all sources is limited to 49 percent, with a maximum FDI component of 20 percent and the remainder coming via NRI and/or portfolio investment, again via the government route. In satellite broadcasting, foreign investment (FDI, NRI, persons of Indian origin and portfolio investment) is limited to 49 percent with prior government approval. TV channels, irrespective of ownership or management control, have to up-link from India provided they comply with the broadcast code issued by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. FDI is limited to 26 percent, including portfolio investment, in news and current affairs channels up-linking from India. One hundred percent FDI is permitted in entertainment and general interest channels. FDI up to 49 percent is permitted with prior approval of the government for establishing up-linking HUB/Teleports.

10. Business Services: One hundred percent FDI is allowed under the automatic route in data processing, software development, and computer consultancy services. One hundred percent FDI is allowed for call centers and business processing outsourcing (BPO) organizations subject to certain conditions.

11. Cable Network: FDI and portfolio investment is limited to 49 percent, including both FDI and portfolio investment. Prior approval is required, subject to Cable Television Networks Rules, 1994.

12. Coal/Lignite: FDI up to 100 percent is allowed through the automatic route in private Indian companies that have captive coal or lignite mines for either direct power generation or for captive consumption in their iron and steel or cement production plants. Similarly, 100 percent foreign investment in the equity of an Indian subsidiary of a foreign company or in the equity of an Indian company for setting up coal processing plants is allowed, subject to the conditions that such an equity recipient shall not do coal mining or sell washed (processed) coal from such plants in the open market.

13. Coffee and Rubber Processing and Warehousing: One hundred percent FDI is permitted under the automatic route with no conditions.

14. Commodity exchanges: Foreign ownership up to 49 percent, with portfolio investment limited to 23 percent and FDI limited to 26 percent is allowed via the government route. No single foreign investor/entity can hold more than five percent of the total paid-up capital.

15. Construction Development Projects: Construction and maintenance of roads, highways, vehicular bridges, tunnels, ports and harbors, townships, housing, commercial buildings, resorts, educational institutions, infrastructure and townships is open to up to 100 percent FDI. Automatic approval is subject to certain minimum capitalization and minimum area-of-development requirements. As of 2010, the minimum capitalization requirement is USD 10 million for wholly owned subsidiaries and USD 5 million for joint ventures with Indian partners. In the case of serviced housing plots, a minimum of 10 hectares (25 acres) must be developed, while in the case of construction–development projects, the minimum built-up area must be 50,000 square meters. At least 50 percent of the project must be developed within five years from the date of obtaining all statutory clearances.

16. Credit Information Companies: Foreign investment is permitted up to 49 percent and is subject to FIPB and RBI approval. Portfolio investment is limited to 24 percent and no single investor/entity can hold more than 10 percent of the total paid-up capital. Furthermore, any acquisition in excess of one percent requires mandatory reporting to RBI.

17. Courier Services other than distribution of letters: One hundred per cent FDI is permitted; however, FIPB approval is required.

18. Defense and strategic industries: FDI is limited to 26 percent and is subject to a license from DIPP in consultation with the Defense Ministry. Production of arms and ammunition is subject to additional FDI guidelines. There are no automatic approvals. Purchase and price preferences may be given to Public Sector Enterprises as per Department of Public Enterprises’ guidelines. The licensee must establish adequate safety and security procedures once the authorization is granted and production begins.

19. Drugs/Pharmaceuticals: FDI is allowed up to 100 percent for drug manufacturing on an automatic approval route.

20. E-commerce: FDI up to 100 percent is allowed in business-to-business e-commerce under the government approval route. No FDI is allowed in retail e-commerce.

21. Hazardous chemicals: One hundred percent FDI is allowed via the automatic route. However, a license under the provisions of the Industries (Development and Regulation) Act, 1951, is required from DIPP.

22. Food Processing: One hundred percent FDI is allowed with automatic approval for: fruit and vegetable processing, dairy products, meat and poultry products, fishing and fish processing, grains, confections, consumer and convenience foods, soft-drink bottling, food parks, cold chain, and warehousing. The exception is for alcoholic beverages and beer, where a license is required, and items reserved for small scale sector. FDI up to 100 percent is allowed via the automatic route for cold storage facilities.

23. Health and Education Services: One hundred percent FDI is allowed under the automatic approval route.

24. Hotels, Tourism, and Restaurants: FDI at 100 percent is allowed with automatic approval.

25. Housing/Real Estate: No FDI is permitted in the retail housing sector by foreigners. However, NRIs who can obtain “Overseas Citizenship of India” status are allowed to own property and invest in India as if they were citizens. NRIs may invest up to 100 percent FDI with prior government approval in the real estate sector and in integrated townships including housing, commercial premises, resorts, and hotels, as well as in projects such as the manufacture of building materials.

26. Industrial explosives: FDI at 100 percent via the automatic route is allowed, subject to licensing by the appropriate authorities.

27. Industrial Parks: FDI up to 100 percent under the automatic route is allowed, provided: the industrial park includes at least ten units with no single unit occupying more than 50 percent of the area, and at least 66 percent of the area is available for industrial activity.

28. Information Technology: FDI of 100 percent is allowed with automatic approval in software and electronics except in the aerospace and defense sectors.

29. Insurance: FDI is limited to 26 percent in insurance and insurance brokering. While FDI approval is automatic, the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (IRDA) must first grant a license. The GOI is considering raising the FDI cap to 49 percent in the insurance sector. After the Finance Standing Committee finishes considering the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority (Amendment) bill, it will go to the full Parliament for a vote.

30. Infrastructure companies in the securities market (stock exchanges, depositories, and clearing corporations): Foreign investment is capped at 49 percent via the government route. FDI is limited to 26 percent and FIIs are limited to 23 percent. Specific to stock exchanges, total foreign investment, including portfolio investment, is allowed via the government route (FIPB) up to 49 percent. The total FDI limit is 26 percent and the FII cap is 23 percent. Other Securities and Exchange Board of India requirements may apply.

31. Legal services: No FDI is allowed and recent court cases strive to limit the ability of foreign attorneys to provide any sort of legal services. Most foreign attorneys practice in India as legal consultants. In March of 2010, a writ of petition was filed by a Chennai-based attorney on behalf of the Association of Indian against 31 foreign law firms, the Bar Council of India, and the Ministry of External Affairs in the Madras High Court. A similar case was decided against foreign firms in December 2009 in the Bombay High Court. The Madras High Court has repeatedly delayed a decision in order to give the court more time to consult with foreign firms. The implications of these cases are unclear and the status of foreign law firms remains uncertain. The petitioner in the Madras case and other opponents to market liberalization insist U.S. attorneys should be barred from practicing law in India until there is reciprocity in the U.S. market.

32. Lottery, Gambling, and Betting: No FDI of any form is allowed.

33. Manufacturing: GOI approval is required for any foreign investment greater than 24 percent equity when the manufacturer is not a small or micro-sized enterprise (SME) and the entity will manufacture items reserved for the SME sector. Manufacturers in this category are subject to additional licensing and minimum export requirements. Since 1997, the government has been steadily decreasing the number of industry sectors reserved under the small scale industry (SSI) policy, from a peak of 800 industries in the late 1990s to just 21 specific goods/services today. The list can be found on the Ministry of Micro and Small and Medium Enterprises website: http://msme.nic.in/MSME_AR_ENG_2009_10.pdf.

34. Mining: One hundred percent FDI is allowed, with automatic approval for diamonds and precious stones, gold/silver, and other mineral mining and exploration. FDI up to 100 percent is also allowed for mining and mineral separation of titanium-bearing minerals and ores, but such activity requires prior government approval.

35. Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFC): FDI is allowed up to 100 percent via the automatic route. In India, NBFCs include merchant banking, underwriting, portfolio management, financial consulting, stock-brokerage, asset management, venture capital, credit rating agencies, housing finance, leasing and finance, credit card businesses, foreign exchange brokerages, money changers, factoring and custodial services, investment advisory services, micro and rural credit. All investments are subject to the following minimum capitalization norms: USD 500,000 upfront for investments with up to 51 percent foreign ownership; USD 5 million upfront for investments with 51 percent to 74.9 percent ownership; USD 50 million total with 7.5 million required up-front and the remaining balance within 24 months for investments with more than 75 percent ownership. One hundred percent foreign-owned NBFCs, with a minimum capitalization of USD 50 million, are not restricted on the number of subsidiaries established for specific NBFC activities and are not required to bring in additional capital. Joint venture operating NBFCs, with up to 75 percent foreign investment, are allowed to set up subsidiaries for other NBFC activities and are also subject to the minimum capitalization norms.

36. Pensions: No FDI is allowed in the pension sector. The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority bill, which would allow FDI in the sector has lapsed and needs to be re-introduced.

37. Petroleum: FDI limits --along with tax incentives, production sharing, and other terms and conditions–- with automatic approval vary by sub-sector as follows:
- Discovered small fields 100 percent
- Refining with domestic private company 100 percent
- Refining by public sector company* 49 percent
- Petroleum product/pipeline 100 percent
- Petrol/diesel retail outlets 100 percent
- LNG Pipeline 100 percent
- Exploration 100 percent
- Investment Financing 100 percent
- Market study and formulation 100 percent
* Needs FIPB approval and disinvestment is prohibited.

38. Pollution Control: FDI up to 100 percent is allowed with automatic approval for equipment manufacture and for consulting and management services.

39. Ports and harbors: FDI up to 100 percent with automatic approval is allowed in construction and manufacturing of ports and harbors.

40. Power: FDI up to 100 percent is permitted with automatic approval in projects relating to electricity generation, transmission, distribution, power trading, and renewable energy other than nuclear reactor power plants.

41. Print Media: Foreign investment in newspapers and news periodicals is restricted to 26 percent under the government approval route. FDI is permitted up to 100 percent in printing science and technology magazines/journals, subject to prior government approval and guidelines issued by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.

42. Professional services: FDI is limited to 51 percent in most consulting and professional services, with automatic approval. Legal services, however, are not open to foreign investment.

43. Research and Development Services: One hundred percent FDI is allowed under the automatic route.

44. Railways: FDI is not allowed in train operations, although 100 percent FDI is permitted in auxiliary areas such as rail track construction, ownership of rolling stock, provision of container services, and container depots.

45. Retailing: The government allows 51 percent FDI for single-brand retail (Raised to 100%; under discussions right now), subject to government approval. FDI is not allowed in any other retail activities, including multi-brand retailing (FDI has been raised to 51%; political discussions underway). However, several large multinational retailers are partnering with Indian companies to form joint-venture wholesale enterprises to avoid violating FDI rules.

46. Roads, Highways, and Mass Rapid Transport Systems: FDI up to 100 percent is allowed with automatic approval for construction and maintenance.

47. Satellites: FDI is limited to 74 percent for the establishment and operation of satellites with prior government approval.

48. Security Agencies: Foreign shareholding is restricted to a maximum of 49 percent under the government approval route.

49. Shipping: FDI is limited to 74 percent with automatic approval for water transport services.

50. Special Economic Zones (SEZ): One hundred percent FDI is allowed automatically when establishing a SEZ and an individual unit within a SEZ. Establishing the unit is subject to Special Economic Zones Act, 2005, and the Department of Commerce.

51. Storage and Warehouse Services: FDI up to 100 percent is allowed under the automatic route, including warehousing of agricultural products with cold storage.

52. Telecommunications: This sensitive sector has seen enormous changes in 2010. FDI in the telecom services sector can be made directly or indirectly in the operating company or through a holding company subject to licensing and security requirements. DIPP sets the security conditions prospective investors must follow to participate in the telecom sector. When approving investment proposals, FIPB will note whether the investment is coming from countries of concern or unfriendly countries. FDI in telecom services such as basic, cellular, access services, national/international long distance, V-Sat, public mobile radio trunked services, global mobile, unified personal communication services, ISP gateways, radio-paging, and end-to-end services is limited to 74 percent and FDI proposals above 49 percent must go via the government route. One hundred percent FDI in equipment manufacturing is authorized via the automatic route. FDI in Internet service providers (ISP) without international gateways, voice-mail, and email is allowed up to 100 percent. Below 49 percent, FDI in this category is authorized via the automatic route. Above 49 percent FDI is authorized via the government route. In both cases, 26 percent divestment is required within the first five years of the investment.

53. Trading/Wholesale: FDI of 100 percent is allowed through the automatic route for activities like exporting, bulk imports with export warehouse sales, and cash-and-carry wholesale trading. A wholesaler/cash-and-carry trader cannot open a retail shop to sell directly to consumers. In the case of test marketing, or if the items are sourced from the small-scale sector, then FIPB approval is required. Single-brand retailing is allowed subject to the FIPB approval, and the FDI limit is 51 percent.