India and the US on Monday has signed an Investment Incentive Agreement, which supersedes the earlier such agreement signed between the two countries in 1997, an official statement said.
This particular agreement was signed in Tokyo by India's Foreign Secretary Vinay Kwatra and US International Development Finance Corporation's Chief Executive Officer Scott Nathan.
"Significant developments have taken place since the signing of the earlier IIA in 1997 including the creation of a new agency called the United States International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) as a successor agency of the erstwhile Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) after the enactment of a recent legislation of USA, the BUILD Act 2018. IIA has been signed, to keep pace with the additional investment support programmes, offered by the DFC, such as debt, equity investment, investment guaranty, investment insurance or reinsurance, feasibility studies for potential projects and grants," India's Ministry of External Affairs said.
"The agreement is the legal requirement for DFC to continue providing investment support in India. DFC or their predecessor agencies have been active in India since 1974 and have so far provided investment support worth $5.8 billion of which $2.9 billion is still outstanding," it said.
Proposals worth $4 billion for providing investment support in India are under consideration by DFC, which earlier provided investment support in sectors that matter for development such as Covid-19 vaccine manufacturing, healthcare financing, renewable energy, SME financing, financial inclusion, infrastructure etc.
It is expected that signing of the IIA would lead to enhanced Investment support provided by DFC in India, which shall further help in India's development, the MEA noted.