Why in News: Private investment in H1 FY26 hit ₹9.9 lakh crore, driven mainly by domestic firms (94% share), while foreign investment fell to a 5-year low.

Introduction
- Recent investment data show diverging perceptions of the Indian economy: while domestic firms are driving private investment growth, foreign investors are increasingly cautious.
- This dual trend has significant policy implications for India’s growth trajectory.
Key Trends
- Private investment rise: New project announcements touched ₹9.9 lakh crore in H1 FY26, a 15-month high.
- Domestic dominance: Share of Indian firms rose from 77% in 2018-19 to 94% in FY26 H1.
- Sectoral focus: Manufacturing emerged as the key driver.
- Foreign pullback: Announcements fell to ₹0.6 lakh crore, a five-year low, marking the 3rd consecutive year of decline.
- Government role: New project announcements fell 71%, with restrained capex growth.
Drivers of Domestic Optimism
- Confidence in long-term growth beyond GST rate cuts.
- Policy push: PLI schemes, Make in India, infrastructure expansion.
- Strong demand outlook and near-record levels of project completions.
Causes of Foreign Caution
- Global factors: Post-COVID uncertainty, capital reallocation.
- Geopolitical issues: US–India tariff frictions.
- Domestic concerns: Regulatory complexity, policy unpredictability, infrastructure bottlenecks.
- Contradiction: Global outflows rose (11% in 2024, 3% in 2023), but India underperformed in FDI inflows.
Implications
- Positive: Domestic-led investment strengthens resilience, creates jobs, enhances manufacturing base, and provides fiscal space for govt.
- Concerns: Foreign capital slowdown may affect technology inflows, global value chain integration, and external sector balance.
- Policy imperative: Enhance ease of doing business, provide regulatory certainty, deepen reforms to attract FDI.
Conclusion
India’s investment story currently rests on domestic vitality. However, to sustain long-term growth and global competitiveness, a balanced mix of domestic and foreign investment is essential. Policy reforms to revive FDI sentiment must complement domestic optimism.
UPSC Relevance
GS Paper III (Economy)
- Investment models and trends in the Indian economy.
Mains Practice Question (15 Marks, 250 words)
Q. Recent data show that domestic firms are driving investment momentum in India, while foreign investment inflows have weakened. Analyse the causes, implications, and policy measures required to sustain a balanced investment environment.
