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Monday, June 9, 2025

Maharashtra & Karnataka Attract 51% of India’s FDI Inflows in FY 2024–25

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According to the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Maharashtra and Karnataka jointly attracted 51% of India’s total foreign direct investment (FDI) in FY 2024–25—marking a pivotal shift in regional investment dynamics.

State-wise FDI Snapshot

State FDI Inflows (FY 2024–25) Share of National FDI
Maharashtra US $19.6 billion 31%
Karnataka US $6.62 billion ~10%
Total India US $81.04 billion – (14% YoY growth; highest in 3 years)

Other notable states:

  • Delhi: US $6 billion

  • Gujarat: US $5.71 billion

  • Tamil Nadu: US $3.68 billion

  • Haryana: US $3.14 billion

  • Telangana: US $3 billion

India’s total FDI of US $81.04 billion represents a 14% year-on-year increase, the highest inflow since FY 2022–23.

Why Maharashtra & Karnataka Lead

  1. Infrastructure Excellence
    • Significant improvements in roads, power, ports, logistics hubs, and industrial clusters have enhanced investor confidence in both Mumbai and Bengaluru.

  2. Vibrant Economies & Hybrid Ecosystems
    • Maharashtra, with Mumbai as its core, is India’s financial nerve centre and hosts world-class SEZs, BSE/NSE, and major enterprises.
    • Karnataka is the IT and biotech powerhouse, home to Bengaluru’s innovation hubs and global R&D operations.

  3. Policy & Ease-of-Doing-Business Reforms
    • Both states have proactively simplified rules, facilitated industrial land acquisition, and offered investor incentives to stay globally competitive.

  4. Macro-Economic Momentum
    • The central government’s investor-friendly policies and global uncertainty have steered capital toward India, with these two states as primary beneficiaries.

Voices from the Ground

  • Financial analysts noted: “Infrastructure has improved considerably and that is making them attractive destinations for FDI in India.”

  • Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal emphasized: “It reflects our long‑term policy clarity, commitment to ease of doing business, and confidence in India’s potential.”

Implications & Forward Outlook

  • Deepened Regional Imbalances: With over half the inflows concentrated in just two states, other regions are under pressure to enhance infrastructure and streamline reforms.

  • Employment & Innovation Growth: Maharashtra and Karnataka are poised to create thousands of jobs in sectors like manufacturing, finance, IT, and biotech.

  • Boost to National GDP: With Maharashtra’s GSDP at ₹42.67 lakh crore and Karnataka’s at ₹28.13 lakh crore in FY 2024–25 (together contributing ~22% to India’s total), FDI inflows significantly fuel national economic growth.

  • Competitive Push Elsewhere: Other states—Delhi, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Haryana, Telangana—are likely to escalate spending on connectivity and policy advocacy to attract more capital.

Why It Matters

  • Reaffirmed Global Trust: A record US $81.04 billion in FDI signals strong international confidence in India’s long-term growth trajectory.

  • Strategic Significance: Maharashtra and Karnataka are cementing their positions as India’s flagship investment zones.

  • Model for Policy Emulation: Their success stories offer replicable blueprints for infrastructure development and investor engagement across the country.

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