National & Regional Exchanges

India’s Inward and Outward FDI

TypeGuest lectures
EventGuest Lectures on India’s Inward and Outward FDI
Organized byIndian Institute of Management Lucknow
LocationLucknow, India
DateAugust 6–7, 2007
SlidesDownload the presentation (PDF)

Guest lectures delivered to PGPM students at the Indian Institute of Management Lucknow (August 6–7, 2007).

In short: A comprehensive teaching overview of foreign direct investment in India — both the investment flowing in and the investment Indian firms send abroad — covering the concepts, the policy history, and the economic impacts.

About the lectures

Delivered to management students at IIM Lucknow, these guest lectures gave a thorough grounding in foreign direct investment in the Indian context — covering both inward and outward FDI, the evolution of policy, and the economic effects, supported by empirical data and research findings.

What the lectures covered

  • FDI fundamentals — the distinction between FDI and portfolio investment, how FDI is measured (stocks vs flows), and the main theoretical frameworks (product-cycle theory, the eclectic/OLI approach).
  • India’s outward FDI evolution — two policy phases (restrictive 1978–1992, liberal from 1992), and the shift from a First to a Second Wave of overseas investment.
  • India’s inward FDI trends — the evolution of policy from 1948 onward, the gap between approved and actual inflows, and the sectoral and source-country composition.
  • Economic impacts — direct contributions, spillovers and technology transfer, R&D implications, and export performance, with mixed evidence on productivity spillovers.

Get the slides

The full presentation is available as a PDF:

⇩  Download the presentation (PDF)

Related research on this site

These lectures draw on the author’s broader work on FDI in India:


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