Mukesh Ambani, Chairman, Reliance Industries
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, December 15
Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani today credited the record foreign direct investment (FDI) in India during the Covid pandemic to Facebook’s announcement in April to invest $5.7 billion (over Rs 43,574 crore) in the Jio Platforms.
“I have no hesitation in going on record that it is your investment that set the ball rolling. Not only for Jio, but for the Indian FDI which has been the largest-ever in its history. And our partnership between Jio and Facebook will actually demonstrate that it is great for India, Indians, and small Indian businesses,” the RIL chairman told Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder of Facebook, which also owns WhatsApp.
India to be among top 3 economies in two decades India will grow to be among the top three economies in the world in the next two decades and per capita income would more than double.
Foreign inflows into India rose 15% to $30 billion during the first half of the current fiscal with $17.5 billion of inflows recorded in August alone. Zuckerberg’s interest in Jio fuelled interest from other companies in the Indian economy leading to the US emerging as the second biggest source of FDI ($7.12 billion), according to the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
Singapore topped with $8.5 billion of FDI inflows followed by Cayman Islands and Mauritius with about $2 billion each. The UK, the Netherlands and France have invested around $1 billion each. Japan, Germany and Cyprus account for another $1 billion. In the past two decades, India has attracted $500 billion in FDI.
Zuckerberg described India as a very special and important country as he talked about the recently launched WhatsApp payments service in India.
Last month, WhatsApp was allowed to roll out its payments service in India which it had been testing for two years. It now has a registered user base of 20 million and is pitted against Paytm, Google Pay, PhonePe and Amazon Pay.
Ambani also credited Prime Minister Modi for ensuring a strong digital backbone that has made this possible. “I wonder if the pandemic had struck four or five year earlier, we would not be in as good a shape. Credit must go to the PM for his Digital India vision of rolling out a country-wide broadband network in his first five years in office.” As a result, the system was able to handle and execute online transactions during the lockdown period.
The Zuckerberg-Ambani virtual conversation was part of the “Facebook Fuel for India 2020” event. Though billed as a “fireside chat”, the two entrepreneurs stiffly faced the camera as they heard each other deliver their remarks.
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