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Copenhagen: Intense negotiations as emerging nations resist scrutiny
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Dubai World meets six largest lenders: report
The six largest lenders to the debt-ridden Dubai World have started discussions with the government-owned conglomerate prior to the firm"s creditors" meeting scheduled for December 21, says a media report.
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FM's power to clear FDI proposals may increase

Could approve foreign investments of up to Rs 1,200 crore. - PM opens door wider for foreign investment - Stop "treaty shopping" denials for FDI: FIPB tells revenue dept - No plan to change FDI norms in retail: govt - CoS to meet on Nov 17 on FDI in aviation - Shobhana Subramanian: When shoppers don"t stop">Shobhana Subramanian: When shoppers don"t stop - Govt yet to resolve applicability of new FDI norms for banks The finance minister could approve foreign investments of up to Rs 1,200 crore, without going to the Cabinet, if a proposal of the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) to fast-track clearance of foreign direct investment (FDI) is accepted. At present, a project with investment of more than Rs 600 crore in sectors routed through the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) has to be referred to the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA). “With the depreciation of the monetary value, it is considered appropriate to review the limit, which may be revised to Rs 1,200 crore,” according to a Cabinet note circulated by DIPP. The Rs 600-crore limit was set in 1996. DIPP has argued that the proposal would “enable FIPB to function more efficiently and reduce regulatory burden on foreign companies, leading to enhanced level of foreign investments”. India received $15.3-billion FDI in the first half of this financial year. It is lower than the $17.2 billion received in the first half of 2008-09, but the inflow is seen as healthy, given the global liquidity crunch. There is also a proposal that the threshold for CCEA approval be fixed for only the ‘foreign investment’ part of the project and not the total investment involved and its total cost. The Committee of Secretaries (CoS) is meeting on November 17 to review the country’s FDI policy, and the DIPP proposal to enhance the finance minister’s power is likely to be discussed there. Under the present dispensation, the proposals relating to the sectors not under the automatic route go to the FIPB, which gives its recommendation to the finance minister.


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