Growth of Corporate Investment in 2000-01 - ଆରବିଆଇ - Reserve Bank of India
Growth of Corporate Investment in 2000-01
Introduction
Capital investment is essential for modernisation of productive capacity and adding new capacity for current and future industrial growth. Projections of capital investment in the private corporate sector provide important insights into the business expectations about performance of economy in general and the manufacturing sector in particular.
An attempt has been made in this study to capture the likely growth of corporate investment based on data on phasing details of projects sanctioned assistance by the major all-India financial institutions and also a few select top public sector banks. The approach is essentially based on the methodology developed by Dr. C. Rangarajan in an article captioned "Forecasting Capital Expenditure in the Corporate Sector" published in the December 13, 1970 issue of the Economic and Political Weekly.
The study is organized into three sections. Section I elaborates on the methodology of projection. Limitations and challenges being faced in making the projections are dealt with in Section II. Salient features of the corporate projects sanctioned assistance by the major financial institutions and public sector banks during 19992000 according to industry, size of investment, location of project etc. are presented in Section III.
SECTION I
Methodology of projection
The method of estimating corporate investment should ideally be based on the available means of financing an investment project. Where capital markets are not well-developed and financial instruments available for intermediation are limited, it is best to meet the project cost by internal accruals and mostly loans from term lending institutions, particularly for corporates with large project outlays. The bulk of the major projects in the Indian private corporate sector have been financed by the leading all India term lending institutions namely the Industrial Development Bank of India (IDBI), the Industrial Credit and Investment Corporation of India (ICICI), the Industrial Finance Corporation of India (IFCI), and the Industrial Investment Bank of India (IIBI). The Infrastructure Development Finance Company Ltd. (IDFC) and some of the major public sector banks have also started financing some of the major corporate projects.
Since a majority of large projects taken up by the private corporate sector in India approach the term lending institutions for financing the project cost, at least partially, the phasing details of capital expenditure available in the project reports submitted by them would provide a base for estimation of likely capital expenditure in the private corporate sector.
In the 1990s, with the introduction of a number of far reaching economic reforms, the financial and corporate sectors have undertaken major initiatives towards re-structuring and re-engineering. As a consequence, the financing pattern of corporate projects has undergone some changes. By the mid 1990s, some corporate units could tap other resources for funding their projects. The concept of universal banking has also started to take roots. Financial institutions have begun providing short-term capital for inventory financing purposes, while some leading commercial banks have begun to participate in the financing of large projects. It is also possible that complementarity between long-term and short-term sources of funds has come into play in the Indian private corporate sector, in the sense that a portion of the short-term funds is used for long-term purposes, and vice versa. Thus, there seems to be some overlap of the purpose of deployment of these two types of funds. For a more detailed discussion on the appropriateness of the methodology adopted and a review of alternative approaches for projection of corporate investment, a reference may be made to the previous study for 199920001 .
The financial sector reforms in the 1990s have, in effect, enlarged the sources of financing corporate projects; in particular, commercial banks have, in recent years, started providing financial support to corporate projects. In pursuit of the objective of higher coverage, an endeavour has been made, in the present study, to cover the projects financed by the IDFC, the State Bank of India, and four major public sector banks, namely, Bank of India, Punjab National Bank, Bank of Baroda and Syndicate Bank.
SECTION II
Assumptions and Limitations
The estimation of capital investment in this study is based on the assumption that most of the companies in the private corporate sector approach the term lending institutions and major public sector banks for financing their projects. The capital costs of the projects assisted by term lending institutions and major public sector banks to these companies, by and large, reflect the trends in investment pattern of the private corporate sector.
Aggregate capital expenditure on assisted projects in any given year comprises i) expenditure on all projects sanctioned in the previous years, and ii) expenditure on projects sanctioned in that and subsequent years. When we project the aggregate capital expenditure for the latest year, the data relating to the first component are available from the phasing details of the projects, whereas for the second component the estimate is essentially in the nature of a projection as we do not have the details of the data on the projects sanctioned in the reference year. In the judgemental estimation, the factors that are taken into account are the major operating factors such as availability of necessary inputs, the performance of the infrastructure sectors like power, transport and coal and the state of industrial relations. In other words the estimate of investment in the current year is judgemental depending upon the investment climate prevalent in that year.
SECTION III
As already elaborated, this study attempts to estimate the likely growth of corporate investment in the reference year 200001, solely based on the envisaged phasing of capital projects assisted by term lending institutions and major commercial banks. The steps that were employed are the following. The basic premise for arriving at the broad idea of corporate investment is that, by suitably aggregating the data on the phasing of capital expenditures over the individual years for the duration of projects, it should, at the beginning of any year, be possible to indicate the investment that is likely to have been made in the course of that year on all the projects for which assistance has been sanctioned by the respective financial institutions/ banks, upto the end of the previous year.
Accordingly, for the current study, data on the phasing of capital expenditures on projects sanctioned by the all-India financial institutions and major public sector banks were collected and aggregated. Where a company approached more than one institution for project assistance, care was taken to avoid duplication in the compilation. Revisions introduced subsequent to granting of loans were also incorporated based on the data available with the term lending institutions; such consolidated data year wise are presented in Table l. When horizontally read, it shows the capital expenditures that are expected to be incurred in various years on projects for which assistance was sanctioned in a given year. Vertically read, it shows the capital expenditures that are expected to be incurred in a year on projects to which assistance had been sanctioned in that year and in previous years.
Apart from the project expenditures, the companies also report the normal capital expenditures likely to be incurred in subsequent years. These expenditures are added to the project expenditures so as to obtain total capital expenditure planned by the private corporate sector. Besides providing project loans, assistance is also provided by the IDBI under Bills Rediscounting Scheme.
Total sanctions under this scheme have been collected separately and incorporated in the investment estimates. Moreover, IDBI was a nodal agency for sanctioning assistance under the Technical Development Fund Scheme (TDFS). However, because of liberalisation of import of capital goods, this scheme operates mainly towards import of technology. As a result, no amount under TDFS was reported to have been sanctioned by IDBI from 1995-96 onwards.
$ |
Estimated capital expenditures incurred in 1999-2000 and likely to be incurred in 2000-01 on the projects to be sanctioned in 2000-01 and 2001-02. |
E |
Estimated |
@ |
Technical Development Fund and Bills Rediscounting Scheme. |
# |
The estimates of Corporate Investment here are ex ante and differ in scope and methodology from the ex post estimates of corporate fixed investment as available in National Accounts Statistics (NAS). See also the Technical Note attached to Growth of Corporate Investment: An attempt at projection for 1999-2000 published in the Monsoon 1999 issue of the Reserve Bank of India Occasional Papers for details. |
Recently the Government of India announced a special purpose scheme namely the Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme (TUFS), for modernisation of textile, jute and cotton ginning and pressing industries. The scheme became operational for 5 years with effect from 1st April 1999 and IDBI has been designated as the nodal agency under the scheme for the textile industry (excluding SSI) and is co-ordinating with all other institutions/ banks as well as government agencies. The TUFS, however, operates as an integral part of a bigger project undertaken by the companies in the textile industry for modernisation and upgradation of their production units, unlike the earlier Technology Development Fund Scheme. As the amount disbursed under the TUFS towards meeting capital expenditures by the target corporates in the textile industry would be, by and large, covered in the project finance data collected from the major AIFIs and banks, the total amount disbursed under the TUFS is not included separately.
Project expenditure during 1999-2000
The details of phasing of capital expenditure in each of the years 1990-91 to 2000-01 in respect of projects sanctioned by the Financial Institutions and top selected commercial banks are presented in the Table 1. Capital expenditure of Rs.44,591 crore was expected to have been incurred during 1999-2000 in respect of the projects sanctioned up to 1998-99. The project proposals submitted during 1999-2000 envisaged capital expenditure of Rs.13,557 crore during that year. In addition, it is expected that fresh project assistance during 2000-01, would cover a few large projects where some capital expenditure is already incurred in 1999-2000. This is placed at around Rs.3,500 crore. Thus, a total of Rs.61,648 crore would have been incurred as investment expenditure during 1999-2000. Besides, the term lending institutions meet the investment requirements of the companies under the Bills Rediscounting Scheme. Under this scheme, Rs.80 crore was disbursed during 1999-2000. The total capital expenditure that might have been incurred during 19992000 thus worked out to Rs.61,728 crore, as compared with Rs.74,567 crore in 199899, the decline being 17.2 per cent.
Projects sanctioned during 1999-2000
This study covers 373 projects sanctioned by term lending institutions and banks during 1999-2000 with an aggregate project cost of Rs.53,581 crore, spread over a nine year period spanning 1995-96 to 2003-04. The number of projects covered for 1998-99 was higher at 620, with much higher aggregate project cost at Rs.79,181 crore. The normal capital expenditure of the 373 projects amounted to Rs.2,825 crore phased out over the eight year period 199899 to 200506. The total capital expenditure of these projects amounted to Rs.56,406 crore (Table 2).
TABLE 2: PHASED PROJECT AND NORMAL CAPITAL EXPENDITURE OF PROJECTS SANCTIONED IN 1998-99 AND 1999-2000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Rs. crore) |
|
Project |
1993-94 |
1998-99 |
1999- |
2000 01 |
2001 02 |
2002 03 |
2003 04 |
2004-05 |
Total |
|
Expenditure |
to |
2000 |
to |
|||||||
|
|
1997-98 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
2006-07 |
|
|
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) |
(8) |
(9) |
(10) |
I : |
1998-99 |
Number of projects: 620 |
||||||||
i) |
Phased capital exp |
9,339 |
25,320 |
23,620 |
13,486 |
4,664 |
1,618 |
1,134 |
|
79,181 |
(11.8) |
(32.0) |
(29.8) |
(17.0) |
(5.9) |
(2.0) |
(1.4) |
(100.0) |
|||
ii) |
Normal capital exp |
14 |
411 |
492 |
499 |
528 |
568 |
1,575 |
|
4,087 |
Total |
9,353 |
25,731 |
24,112 |
13,985 |
5,192 |
2,186 |
2,709 |
83,268 |
||
|
|
(11.4) |
(30.9) |
(29.0) |
(16.8) |
(6.2) |
(2.6) |
(3.2) |
|
(100.0) |
II : |
1999-2000 |
Number of projects: 373 |
||||||||
i) |
Phased capital exp |
271 |
8,214 |
13,357 |
15,095 |
10,333 |
6,114 |
197 |
|
53,581 |
(0.5) |
(15.3) |
(24.9) |
(28.2) |
(19.3) |
(11.4) |
(0.4) |
(100.0) |
|||
ii) |
Normal capital exp |
|
83 |
200 |
394 |
420 |
484 |
498 |
746 |
2,825 |
Total |
271 |
8,297 |
13,557 |
15,489 |
10,753 |
6,598 |
695 |
746 |
56,406 |
|
|
|
(0.5) |
(14.7) |
(24.0) |
(27.5) |
(19.1) |
(11.7) |
(1.2) |
(1.3) |
(100.0) |
N.B. |
() : Nil/negligible. |
The phasing details of the projects sanctioned during 19992000 showed that a share of 24.0 per cent (Rs.13,557 crore) in total expenditure was proposed to be incurred in 1999-2000 and another 27.5 per cent (Rs.15,489 crore) during 200001. This phasing pattern differed significantly from that of the projects sanctioned in 199899. In respect of projects sanctioned in 199899, 30.9 per cent of the total expenditure was planned to be spent in the initial year of sanction i.e., 199899 and another 29.0 per cent in the following year. It may be mentioned that in respect of projects sanctioned assistance in 19992000, expenditure in the preceding year 199899, amounted to Rs.8,297 crore accounting for 14.7 per cent of total cost of these projects.
A discernable feature of phasing of projects in the post-liberalisation period is that, some of the corporates have been investing considerably large amounts in capital expenditure even before approaching financial institutions for assistance. It is possible that these funds were from their own resources, or were obtained as short-term funds from banks/ financial institutions on a roll over basis.
In fact, the share of expenditure incurred on projects in the year prior to the year of sanction has been on the rise. The share rose from 5.5 per cent in 1997-98 to 7.9 per cent in 1998-99 and further up to 14.7 per cent in 1999-2000 (Table 3). This aspect, has also to be factored in while arriving at the one year ahead forecast of corporate investment.
TABLE 3: CAPITAL EXPENDITURE IN THE YEAR OF SANCTION AND THE PRECEDING YEAR |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Rs. crore) |
Year of |
Number of |
Capital expenditure |
||||
sanction |
projects |
Amount |
Per cent share in |
|||
|
|
|
total project cost |
|||
Aggregate |
Year prior |
Year of |
Year prior to |
Year of |
||
project cost |
to the year |
sanction |
the year of |
sanction |
||
|
|
|
of sanction |
|
sanction |
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
1996-97 |
1117 |
58,940 |
2,326 |
21,917 |
3.9 |
37.2 |
1997-98 |
899 |
81,533 |
4,444 |
23,621 |
5.5 |
29.0 |
1998-99 |
620 |
83,268 |
6,561 |
25,731 |
7.9 |
30.9 |
1999-2000 |
373 |
56,406 |
8,297 |
13,557 |
14.7 |
24.0 |
Industrial pattern of projects
The industrial classification of projects adopted for this study is based on the industrial activity as indicated in the project reports. Partly induced by policy, infrastructure projects comprising power, telecom, storage, roads and ports (41 projects) predominated with an aggregate cost of Rs.26,750 crore, accounting for as much as 49.9 per cent as against 48 projects in 1998-99 with a share of 53.1 per cent (Table 4); power sector (21 projects) alone accounted for 29.7 per cent.
TABLE 4: INDUSTRY-WISE DISTRIBUTION OF PROJECTS AND THEIR COST, 1998-99 AND 1999-2000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Rs.crore) |
|
1998-99 |
1999-2000 |
|||||||
Industry |
Project cost |
Project cost |
||||||
Number of |
Amount |
Per cent |
Number of |
Amount |
Per cent |
|||
|
|
|
projects |
|
share |
Projects |
|
share |
|
|
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) |
1. |
Infrastructure (i + ii + iii) |
48 |
42,080 |
53.1 |
41 |
26,750 |
49.9 |
|
i ) |
Power |
27 |
33,360 |
42.1 |
21 |
15,925 |
29.7 |
|
ii) |
Telecom |
13 |
6,825 |
8.6 |
4 |
3,409 |
6.4 |
|
iii) |
Storage, roads and ports |
8 |
1,895 |
2.4 |
16 |
7,416 |
13.8 |
|
2. |
Engineering (i + ii + iii + iv) |
115 |
15,761 |
20.0 |
69 |
8,508 |
15.9 |
|
i) |
Metals and metal products |
56 |
10,100 |
12.8 |
23 |
6,917 |
12.9 |
|
ii) |
Automobiles and auto-ancilliaries |
35 |
4,955 |
6.3 |
22 |
566 |
1.1 |
|
iii) |
Electrical equipments |
12 |
252 |
0.3 |
14 |
380 |
0.7 |
|
iv) |
Non-electrical machinery |
12 |
454 |
0.6 |
10 |
644 |
1.2 |
|
3. |
Chemicals (i + ii + iii) |
98 |
10,574 |
13.3 |
35 |
4,940 |
9.2 |
|
i) |
Petrochemicals and chemicals |
72 |
8,580 |
10.8 |
27 |
4,823 |
9.0 |
|
ii) |
Pharmaceuticals and drugs |
23 |
230 |
0.3 |
8 |
117 |
0.2 |
|
iii) |
Pesticides and fertilizers |
3 |
1,764 |
2.2 |
|
|
|
|
4. |
Mining and Quarrying |
|
|
|
5 |
794 |
1.5 |
|
5. |
Cement |
18 |
1,171 |
1.5 |
8 |
1,627 |
3.0 |
|
6. |
Textiles (other than jute) |
94 |
2,284 |
2.9 |
82 |
3,335 |
6.2 |
|
7. |
Sugar |
27 |
975 |
1.2 |
22 |
998 |
1.9 |
|
8. |
Paper and paper products |
23 |
787 |
1.0 |
12 |
457 |
0.9 |
|
9. |
Electronics |
24 |
773 |
1.0 |
9 |
490 |
0.9 |
|
10. |
Hotels and restaurants |
28 |
992 |
1.2 |
13 |
1,603 |
3.0 |
|
11. |
Transport Services |
11 |
533 |
0.7 |
3 |
663 |
1.2 |
|
12. |
Others * |
134 |
3,251 |
4.1 |
74 |
3,415 |
6.4 |
|
|
Total |
620 |
79,181 |
100.0 |
373 |
53,581 |
100.0 |
* |
Comprises industries, each with a share of less than 1 per cent in total project cost in 1998-99 and 1999-2000. |
||
N.B. |
() Nil/negligible |
Share of engineering as well as chemical industries declined by 4.1 percentage points each to 15.9 per cent and 9.2 per cent respectively in 1999-2000. The three major industry groups viz., infrastructure, engineering and chemicals together claimed three-fourths of the total project cost (75.0 per cent) in 1999-2000 as compared with 86.4 per cent in 1998-99. Among the individual industries, storage, roads and ports occupied the second position with a share of 13.8 per cent, followed by metals and metal products with a share of 12.9 per cent, and petrochemicals and other chemicals with a share of 9.0 per cent.
Other prominent industries where new projects were sanctioned during 1999-2000 are telecom (6.4 per cent) and textiles (6.2 per cent). The shares of industries such as hotels and restaurants, cement, sugar, mining and quarrying, non-electrical machinery, transport services and automobiles and auto-ancillaries varied between 1 per cent and 3 per cent.
Size-wise pattern of projects
Very large projects each costing Rs.100 crore and above, numbering 76, dominated the scene with an aggregate project cost of Rs.46,240 crore claiming 86.3 per cent of the total project cost in 1999-2000 (Table 5). In the preceding year, such projects, numbering 78, accounted for 87.1 per cent of the total project cost. Projects in the size classes of Rs.50 crore to Rs.100 crore (42 projects) and Rs.20 crore to Rs.50 crore (90 projects) had a share in total project cost of 5.4 per cent and 5.3 per cent respectively.
In fact, 24 mega projects, each with a cost of Rs.500 crore and above, accounted for 65.7 per cent (Rs. 35,181 crore) in 1999-2000.
TABLE 5: SIZE-WISE DISTRIBUTION OF PROJECTS AND THEIR COST, 1998-99 AND 1999-2000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Rs.crore) |
1998-99 |
1999-2000 |
||||||||
Size of projects |
Number of |
Project cost |
Number of |
Project Cost |
|||||
(Rs. Crore) |
projects |
Amount |
Per cent |
projects |
Amount |
Per cent |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
|
share |
|
|
Share |
|
|
|
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) |
1. |
Less than 5.0 |
111 |
313 |
0.4 |
38 |
114 |
0.2 |
||
2. |
5.0 |
- |
7.5 |
74 |
460 |
0.6 |
29 |
181 |
0.3 |
3. |
7.5 |
- |
10.0 |
52 |
454 |
0.6 |
22 |
191 |
0.4 |
4. |
10.0 |
- |
15.0 |
89 |
1,103 |
1.4 |
38 |
462 |
0.9 |
5. |
15.0 |
- |
20.0 |
60 |
1,012 |
1.3 |
38 |
645 |
1.2 |
6. |
20.0 |
- |
50.0 |
101 |
3,099 |
3.9 |
90 |
2,849 |
5.3 |
7. |
50.0 |
- |
100.0 |
55 |
3,787 |
4.8 |
42 |
2,898 |
5.4 |
8. |
100.0 & above |
78 |
68,953 |
87.1 |
76 |
46,240 |
86.3 |
||
Total |
|
|
620 |
79,181 |
100.0 |
373 |
53,581 |
100.0 |
State-wise pattern of projects
The state-wise classification of projects is based on the location of the projects as stated by the companies in their project reports. Tamil Nadu occupied the top position with a share of 24.3 per cent (Rs.13,017 crore) in 1999-2000, followed by Maharashtra (Rs.10,987 crore) in the second position, with a share of 20.5 per cent in 1999-2000 (Table 6). The next three slots were occupied by Gujarat (12.5 per cent), Andhra Pradesh (11.1 per cent) and Orissa (7.3 per cent). Karnataka accounted for 4.4 per cent in the total project cost during 1999-2000, followed by Punjab and West Bengal, each accounting for 4.0 per cent.
TABLE 6: STATE-WISE DISTRIBUTION OF PROJECTS AND THEIR COST, 1998-99 AND 1999-2000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Rs.crore) |
1998-99 |
1999-2000 |
||||||
State/Union Territory |
Number of |
Project Cost |
Number of |
Project cost |
|||
projects |
Amount |
Per cent |
projects |
Amount |
Per cent |
||
|
|
|
|
share |
|
|
share |
|
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) |
1. |
Andhra Pradesh |
59 |
13,261 |
16.7 |
30 |
5,927 |
11.1 |
2. |
Bihar |
16 |
2,656 |
3.4 |
4 |
42 |
0.1 |
3. |
Delhi |
|
|
|
7 |
971 |
1.8 |
4. |
Gujarat |
58 |
12,174 |
15.4 |
35 |
6,707 |
12.5 |
5. |
Haryana |
28 |
1,771 |
2.2 |
20 |
466 |
0.9 |
6. |
Karnataka |
26 |
4,023 |
5.0 |
18 |
2,366 |
4.4 |
7. |
Kerala |
16 |
901 |
1.1 |
5 |
581 |
1.1 |
8. |
Madhya Pradesh |
16 |
1,210 |
1.5 |
11 |
1,289 |
2.4 |
9. |
Maharashtra |
107 |
19,253 |
24.3 |
66 |
10,987 |
20.5 |
10. |
Orissa |
8 |
1,940 |
2.4 |
3 |
3,926 |
7.3 |
11. |
Punjab |
17 |
332 |
0.4 |
16 |
2,123 |
4.0 |
12. |
Tamil Nadu |
90 |
8,936 |
11.3 |
82 |
13,017 |
24.3 |
13. |
Uttar Pradesh |
50 |
6,153 |
7.8 |
26 |
1,946 |
3.6 |
14. |
West Bengal |
54 |
3,948 |
5.0 |
16 |
2,146 |
4.0 |
15. |
Others @ |
75 |
2,623 |
3.3 |
34 |
1,085 |
1.8 |
|
Total |
620 |
79,181 |
100.0 |
373 |
53,581 |
100.0 |
@ Comprise states/ union territories, each with share of less than 1 per cent in total project cost in 1998-99 and 1999-2000. They are Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Chandigarh, Goa, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, Rajasthan, Sikkim, Tripura, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Chandigarh, Diu and Daman and Pondicherry. N.B. () Nil/negligible |
Purpose-wise project expenditure
New projects numbering 117 costing Rs.31,291 crore, accounted for about three-fifths of total project cost (58.4 per cent), little higher than the share of such projects (57.5 per cent) in the previous year (Table 7).
Cost of 135 projects for expansion amounted to Rs.12,443 crore, accounting for 23.2 per cent in 1999-2000. Cost overrun of 38 projects at Rs.6,245 crore during 1999-2000 accounted for 11.7 per cent (13.6 per cent in 199899). Projects for diversification claimed a higher share (4.0 per cent) as against 0.6 per cent in the previous year.
Corporate Investment in 2000-01
The aggregate capital expenditure for the reference period comprises i) expenditure on all projects sanctioned in the previous years, and ii) expenditure on projects sanctioned in that year.
TABLE 7: PURPOSE-WISE DISTRIBUTION OF PROJECTS AND THEIR COST, 1998-99 AND 1999-2000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Rs.crore) |
1998-99 |
1999-2000 |
||||||
Purpose |
Number of |
Project cost |
Number of |
Project cost |
|||
Projects |
Amount |
Per cent |
projects |
Amount |
Per cent |
||
|
|
|
|
share |
|
|
share |
|
(1) |
(2) |
(3) |
(4) |
(5) |
(6) |
(7) |
1. |
New projects |
256 |
45,554 |
57.5 |
117 |
31,291 |
58.4 |
2. |
Expansion |
208 |
20,724 |
26.2 |
135 |
12,443 |
23.2 |
3. |
Overrun |
49 |
10,776 |
13.6 |
38 |
6,245 |
11.7 |
4. |
Diversification |
19 |
480 |
0.6 |
16 |
2,124 |
4.0 |
5. |
Modernization |
78 |
1,501 |
1.9 |
52 |
1,277 |
2.4 |
6. |
Others |
10 |
146 |
0.2 |
15 |
202 |
0.4 |
|
Total |
620 |
79,181 |
100.0 |
373 |
53,581 |
100.0 |
Some of the major factors leading to lower quantum of fixed capital investment in 19992000, inter alia, could have been the loss in momentum in production of capital goods in the later part of the year, substantial decline in import of capital goods, and some slow down in the sanction of assistance for projects by the financial institutions. The investment growth of private corporate sector during 2000-01 is worked out based on planned capital expenditure of projects sanctioned assistance up to 1999-2000, and the perceptions regarding the state of economy in 2000-01. The total envisaged project expenditure in 2000-01 for which sanctions were accorded up to 1999-2000, amounted to Rs.39,801 crore. Some crucial indications of the dampening of corporate investment in 200001 are: deceleration in the production of capital goods, a discernible shift in favour of working capital finance by financial institutions like the IDBI, ICICI etc., and lesser emphasis on financing traditional industries. On the other hand, there have also been a few signals favouring investment, such as positive stance of the Government towards power and telecom sectors, change over to revenue sharing in telecom sectors, etc. Against this backdrop, the likely capital expenditure in 200001, on projects sanctioned during 200001, could be placed at around Rs.22,000 crore. Assuming that the assistance under Bills Rediscounting Scheme would be of the order of Rs.100 crore, the aggregate capital expenditure in 2000-01 would be almost at the same level as in the previous year, at around Rs. 62,000 crore. It may, however, be emphasized that projection of private corporate investment in 2000-01 attempted in this article may be viewed more as providing a prognostic view indicating broad direction and dimension of the growth of corporate investment that might have taken place during April 2000 to March 2001.
* Prepared in the Corporate Studies Division of the Department of Statistical Analysis and Computer Services. The study for 1999-2000 was published as a special note in the Monsoon 1999 issue of the RBI Occasional Papers.
1 Satyanarayana, R. and Bose, S. (1999) "Growth of Corporate Investment: An attempt at projection for 1999-2000", RBI Occasional Papers, Volume 20, No. 2, Monsoon 1999.