Narendra Modi to inaugurate Make in India Week on Feb 13

The main aim of the event is to attract more FDI into the country.

Update: 2015-12-17 20:03 GMT
Prime Minister Narendra Modi (Photo: PTI)

New Delhi:  Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate the Make in India Week in Mumbai on February 13, a mega event in which the government expects participation of over a 1,000 companies and delegates from over 60 countries.

"We have taken a very major initiative to launch the Make in India Week which will be held in February from the 13-18 February 2016," DIPP Secretary Amitabh Kant told reporters here.

"The event would be inaugurated on February 13 by thePrime Minister. The theme of the event will be innovation, design and sustainability," he added.

The main aim of the event is to attract more FDI into the country, said the secretary, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP)."Since the announcement of Make in India we have been able to get significant investments.

After the launch of Make in India, FDI in the last 17 months as compared to the previous 17 months has grown by about 35 per cent," he said. Kant said the global investor community has responded to growing confidence.

"We have been able to get substantial investments in areas which include electronics, automotive, food processing, textiles and garments, renewable energy and construction.

Several companies like Foxconn, Zenith, IKEA, Wanda group of China are investing in India. "Many of the investments have fructified, many are in the process of fructification. We are handholding for many investments. All the investments are in the process of happening," the DIPP Secretary said.

The "key challenge", he said, is to make India the easiest and simplest place to do business, a goal, which the Government is determined to achieve.

"We will push for greater momentum to domestic companies in India. In the next one-month, DIPP officials will be going across India holding a series of road shows to provide impetus and momentum to domestic companies, push their investments. We will also provide a push to startups," Kant said.

Asked whether political compulsions should keep India away from opening up multi-brand retail for FDI, Kant said: "Government has done a lot of liberalisation across sectors...These are all things calibrated at the political level. India is today the most open economy in the world. We have opened up everything except multi-brand.” 

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