Mba 301
Mba 301
Mba 301
Maximum Marks : 30
Q6. What is outsourcing? Is outsourcing a good business exercise for developed countries.
"The system connects the dots between big picture strategy elements such
as mission (our purpose), vision (what we aspire for), core values (what we
believe in), strategic focus areas (themes, results and/or goals) and the more
operational elements such as objectives (continuous improvement activities),
measures (or key performance indicators, or KPIs, which track strategic
performance), targets (our desired level of performance), and initiatives
(projects that help you reach your targets)."
The term “Business environment” represents the sum of all the individuals,
institutions, competing organisations, government, courts, media, investors,
and other factors outside the power of the business organisations but
affects the business performance. Hence, changes in government economic
policies, rapid changes in technology, changes in consumer tastes and
preferences, increasing market competition, etc. are outside the business
organisations' power but affect the business performance immensely.
Human resources
Value system
Vision and mission
Labour union
Corporate culture
2. Legal Environment
3. Economic Environment
It involves market conditions, consumer needs, interest rate, inflation
rate, economic policies, etc.
4. Political Environment
It consists of forces like the government's attitudes towards
businesses, ease-of-doing-business policies, the stability of the
governing body, and peace within the country. All of these factors are
extremely crucial for a company to sustain itself. If the central and
local government sanctions, policies, or acts are in favour of
businesses, the nation's overall economy strengthens due to
increasing employment, productivity, and import and export of
various products.
Example - A pro-business government will make foreign investments
more attractive in that country.
5. Technological Environment
It comprises the knowledge of the latest technological advancements
and scientific innovations to improve the quality and relevance of
goods and services.
A company that regularly keeps track of these news can mould its
business strategies accordingly.
Example: A Watch Company that sells smartwatches and traditional
watches will prosper as smartwatches are trendy recently.
But just as headquarters did in the “old days,” business units can lose strategic focus.
Considering that business units today have the capacity to be highly attuned to the
marketplace, why does that happen? My experience suggests that business units are a
lot like people. People cannot be good at everything, yet some certainly die trying!
Business units succeed—they reach and surpass their potential—when managers rivet
their attention to what the organization does best. That may sound a bit like a pop-
business platitude. It is the opposite. In this article, I present a method for conducting
an orderly investigation of a business unit’s current health and welfare; the goal is to
help companies find strategic focus and thereby liberate their resources for growth.
The tool offered here is a process that evaluates customers, products, and services
along three dimensions: strategic importance, significance, and profitability. The
result of this exercise is a list of eight recommended actions or strategic imperatives—
both being a polite way of saying “marching orders.”
Perhaps the process of evaluation sounds straightforward or even simple. Again, the
opposite is true. It is not going too far to say that good strategy formulation is a
painstaking process. It takes more than common sense. It requires extensive data,
rigorous analysis, and the combined judgment of key decision makers. The outcome of
good strategy is both profit and growth. Far too often, growth plays second fiddle. At
other times, growth strategies fail the profit test. I’ve heard it suggested that the two
goals are mutually exclusive. They’re not—if the company removes all marginal
activities that divert resources from critical customers and products. The process
described in this article should be used at least every two years—once a year is better—
to clear out the underbrush that clutters the business unit landscape. In the process of
clearing, managers should rediscover those activities that must be not only preserved
but also cultivated.
In business, where bigger is so often mixed up with better, it bears stating that
stripping away detritus does not diminish the company. Metaphors abound: Trees are
pruned for faster growth and better fruit. My wife pinches still-colorful blossoms from
her geraniums, but the new blossoms are healthier and even brighter. Danny Miller,
author of The Icarus Paradox, a book that examines some of the major corporate
failures of the past quarter century, has said that such pruning reminds him of the
sculptor who chips away excess stone to reveal an elegant figure. In a more practical
vein, Miller likens the process of strategic renewal to moving one’s office: it clears the
mind and redirects energy toward real priorities. In this sense, the process that follows
is more than addition and subtraction; it is multiplication and transformation.
Before looking at the reasons business units commonly lose focus and before
examining the strategic-renewal process in depth, let’s make the abstract concrete with
a real example of the tool at work. It involves the specialty-glass-products division of a
multibillion-dollar manufacturing concern that produced 4,000 stockkeeping units
(SKUs) for some 25 distributors, 500 original equipment manufacturers, and another
500 individual customers. Once the leading player in its industry, the company was
slowly but surely losing ground. Sales had been flat for three years, market share was
slipping, costs were rising, and inventory turns were alarmingly low. Management,
naturally, wanted to know why, and just about everyone in the unit had an opinion.
Finally, to cut through the noise, the business unit’s general manager ordered a
thorough analysis of product movement.
What ensued was a mess. No sooner was a product found to be a slow mover than
someone would argue that it was important to a major customer. Some products were
sold to lots of not-so-important customers, and a few products went to customers that
made purchases only once every two years. Where did all this information leave
management? Exactly nowhere.
It was at this point that the company turned to the strategic-renewal process for help.
The fundamental premise of the process is that customers (or customer groups) must
be analyzed first because they should determine the product line, not vice versa, even
in technology-driven companies. Indeed, companies that have this equation backward
usually learn too late that they have been wasting time, energy, and money on
customers that are neither strategic nor significant. These undesirable customers not
only divert attention from the central mission of the company but also are unprofitable
in most cases. They complicate production, marketing, management information
systems (MIS), billing, customer service, accounts receivable, and distribution. In
short, they should be shown the door unless there is a darned good reason to keep
them. It is only after targeted customers (and undesirable ones, too) are identified that
decisions about product and service offerings can be made intelligently.
Over a period of several weeks, managers at the specialty glass company tackled the
first step of the renewal process: evaluating each customer’s strategic importance. (The
company grouped small and midsize customers by channel, then by revenues, and
then by industry. This grouping process will be examined later.) Then, taking one
customer or customer group at a time, the managers asked questions such as, Does the
customer truly value what we do well or does it require products and services that
introduce unnecessary complexity and strain our systems? Does the customer provide
an opportunity for us to grow? Can we learn from the customer, perhaps through its
technology, marketing skills, or management techniques? Does it provide a
springboard to other important customers or customer groups?
Next, the managers assessed each customer’s or customer group’s significance, asking,
Does the customer provide substantial revenue or have the potential to do so? Finally,
the analysis turned to customer profitability. Like most companies, the specialty-glass-
products division had only a rough idea of gross margin contribution from major
customer groups. The renewal process prompted the division to develop a method for
determining true profitability, accounting for those cash and accrual costs that are
sometimes ignored—management information, other administrative costs, and the
cost of capital.
Putting the three pieces together, the managers made a startling discovery: only four
customers—all distributors—met the test of strategic importance, significance, and
profitability. Armed with this insight, the managers moved to the second part of the
strategic-renewal process: analyzing each of their products, one by one, for strategic
importance, significance, and profitability. (This is a tedious but necessary step.) As in
most cases, the latter two measurements required quite a bit of data crunching, but the
outcomes were factual and noncontroversial. The analysis of strategic importance was
more complicated. Were the products a result of proprietary technology that provided
a competitive advantage? Did they fit well with the company’s core production and
distribution capabilities? Did they provide growth opportunities by serving the core
customers better than competitors’ products? Were they a springboard to other
important customers? These questions spawned some contentious debate, but
eventually the business unit’s general manager was able to draw the necessary (and
enlightened) conclusions and move forward.
Having completed the product analysis, the strategic-renewal team revisited their
customer analysis and came to a profound conclusion: their best hope for profitable
growth while meeting reasonable working-capital requirements was to reduce both the
customer and product base drastically. No longer would the company sell directly to
original equipment manufacturers and individual customers; instead, it would sell
only to four distributors—its sole customers. The company would discontinue 1,700 of
its 4,000 SKUs and outsource another 1,000 to suppliers with lower labor and utility
costs. Needless to say, costs and working capital requirements were reduced
dramatically.
The company concluded that its best hope for growth was to reduce both
the customer and product base drastically.
Today the business unit is back on track. Profitability has improved substantially
because costs associated with the discontinued items and former customers have been
eliminated. Market share has stabilized, and inventory turns have more than doubled.
And perhaps most important, its managers now have in their hands one of the most
powerful competitive tools of all: strategic focus.
Not all companies that undergo the strategic-renewal process will end up making
changes as radical as those the specialty glass company made. The clutter and
complexity facing that company were extreme. But that example is typical of what
happens when business units let their customers and products manage them instead of
the other way around—a common occurrence. Let’s consider the three main reasons
why business units lose focus.
Business units lose focus because of flawed notions about fixed costs
and incremental contributions.
As a turnaround manager, I have often heard the argument that a certain activity must
be continued to cover fixed costs. My reply may sound harsh, but it is intended to be
instructive: From this moment forward, no costs are fixed. And those who insist that
costs are fixed run the risk of finding themselves treated as a variable cost.
A few years ago, the managers of the distribution arm of a manufacturing and
distribution company persuaded senior executives that the company should add
another manufacturer’s product line, even though the marginal contribution was only
7%. They justified their case by citing the need to reduce unit distribution costs. Six
months later, the same managers made a plea for a new warehouse and an upgrade to
the MIS because they were out of capacity. They supported their capital request
for $700,000—as I said, investments come in chunks—in part with the news that they
had found yet another product line, this time with a 10% margin, to help cover the new
fixed costs. This kind of thinking eventually led the company into Chapter 11 and,
ultimately, liquidation.
Business units lose focus when they fail to determine whether a contribution is truly
incremental and when they fail to account for all associated costs. Almost every
incremental activity adds to administrative costs, which have to be covered by the
gross margin. Yet administrative and operational costs are rarely assigned properly.
Even when they are, they are usually higher than they seem in black and white because
the incremental activities add complexity that diverts attention from the core business.
In this way, incremental contributions can subvert from within, bit by bit, until a
business unit has nowhere to go but down.
Economic growth is vital for business enterprises. But forced growth—that is, growth
not rooted in sound strategy—is a siren song beckoning unwary business leaders. For
example, a global food-and-spirits conglomerate required its business unit managers
to increase sales by 15% per year when price inflation in their products worldwide
averaged only 1%. The attempt to reach those targets created havoc. Many senior
managers, including those who set the goals, are no longer with the company. The
stock price, which was in the mid-thirties in 1992, is now trading in the mid-twenties.
Tough goals are appropriate only when tied to the real world of customers and
competitors, challenges and opportunities. Otherwise, they spell trouble.
Nonstrategic growth has many guises. I confess that my experience has made me
skeptical about diversification, acquisitions, and “stretch” budgets. I’ll explain my
skepticism about each in turn.
By definition, diversification is neither good nor bad, or perhaps I should say it can be
either. But one thing is certain: business units can lose their focus quickly when they
diversify based on one of two popular theories—first, that it pays to own some
countercyclical protection, and second, that a good manager can manage anything. The
countercyclical theory has worked for some but is not foolproof. It was the primary
argument advanced by the conglomerate Allegheny International as it bought more
companies before eventually seeking bankruptcy in 1988. Diversified oil companies
were shocked in 1991 when exploration, refining, and the chemical businesses all
tanked together.
As for the good-manager theory, only a few companies have proved it right. General
Electric Company and, more recently, AlliedSignal have demonstrated that
diversification on this basis can be very sound indeed. These companies have elevated
management to an art form, but even GE has stumbled. Its acquisition of Kidder,
Peabody & Company was a clear loss, and it has taken GE almost a decade to get NBC
on the right track.
Perhaps most troubling about diversification, particularly at the business unit level, is
that it can lessen the impact of scarce resources—human, financial, and technical.
Diversification, with its bold promise at the outset, can easily deteriorate into a
situation in which the core business loses its strength and weakens the whole
organization.
Acquisitions often steer business units into the same trap. If a business unit buys
another company to gain new technologies, customers, or channels related to the core
business, so be it. But very often managers overreach. Strategic fit is tenuous. The
acquired technologies, customers, and channels are not always congruent; sometimes
they’re not even parallel. The scorecard over the past 30 years suggests that
boardroom discussions should be thorough and fierce before acquisitions are
approved. Boards of directors should be especially wary if one of the arguments is that
the acquisition will reduce overhead as a percentage of revenues. My analysis of
troubled companies over the past decade shows that selling, general, and
administrative (SG&A) expenses have risen at a higher rate than revenues. Only a few
truly lean management companies, such as the Swiss conglomerate ABB Asea Brown
Boveri, have been successful in reducing and retaining lower overhead rates through
acquisition.
Another problem is stretch budgets. There are legitimate arguments for and against
stretch budgets. However, my experience with troubled companies indicates that while
goals should be high, budgets should be realistic. When high goals are expressed in
stretch budgets, expenses and working capital requirements tend to rise more quickly
than revenues and margins. Moreover, managers are often lulled into the sense that
budget numbers are real, so they delay taking corrective action until late in the budget
year. Perhaps most damaging, stretch budgets encourage nonstrategic growth.
Managers desperate to “make the numbers” may take on business that seems to shore
up the company in the short term but can damage it in the long. Moreover, stretch
budgets militate against divestiture of customers, products, and services that are not
strategic, significant, or truly profitable.
Business units lose focus because they are ignorant of the true
profitability of customers, products, and services.
A manufacturer whose distribution system was designed to ship full truckloads also
used UPS to ship one or two items at a time upon customer demand. The way the
company figured it, such sales weren’t as profitable, but they were still worthwhile. A
more careful analysis quickly showed they weren’t. Indeed, the direct labor and
material cost was $27 to ship a $23 order, which carried a gross margin of $5.60. The
direct costs, which included order entry and billing, understated the true costs because
they did not register customer-service and MIS fees. Using a drop-ship program like
this one could be justified if it took care of emergency orders for important customers.
But the program was for everyone and had been justified because it showed a profit on
the books.
I wish I could say this example was an exception to the rule, but it is not. Indeed, I
have found that many—perhaps even most—businesses do not know the true accrual
profits of their products and services, and fewer still know the profitability of
customers. Even fewer companies track product or service costs through the
distribution process. Distribution as well as SG&A costs are rarely assigned to specific
products, product groups, or services. Simply put, companies have no system in place
for gathering and processing these data, even though activity-based costing has been
around for more than a decade. But without fairly accurate information about profits,
managers eventually come to learn that the more they sell, the more they lose. Then
they scramble to fix problems with solutions that will not contribute significantly to
the company’s future.
If accrual accounting is often neglected, cash accounting gets even shorter shrift. Cash
from operations is required for survival and growth. Sooner or later, debt and equity
will dry up if a business does not produce cash profits from operations. Even so, cash
can get tied up in slow-moving inventory for small or nonstrategic customers when it is
sorely needed to support new-product development or to acquire inventory that not
only turns faster but is also important to the company’s core strategy. Marketing
expenses for some customers can soak up more cash than the customers produce.
In other cases, cash can be tied up by customers with overdue accounts receivable.
Fixed assets that are either cash losers or nonstrategic also detract from the company’s
ability to support its core strategies. These poor practices involving cash can be
insidious. Little by little, cash is diverted away from customers, products, and services
that are strategic, significant, and profitable. In extreme cases, misallocation of cash
leads to crisis: companies can’t pay suppliers or meet the payroll. Finally, promising
opportunities sometimes are forgone because both debt and equity have become
difficult to raise. In all these events, strategic focus—and any running chance for
success—is lost.
Now, it sometimes happens that business units that lose strategic focus for the above
three reasons wake up to the fact that something is wrong. Customers start defecting,
market share keeps slipping, good employees jump ship: eventually, clues like these
cannot be explained away any longer, and management decides to get to the bottom of
the matter. A task force is formed, consultants are brought in, TQM or some other
newfangled technique is installed. But then…nothing changes. Why not? My
experience suggests that there are three primary reasons.
Business units fail to refocus because they are preoccupied with the
present or the past.
The main focus of both leaders and managers should be the future. Certainly, they
should have in place the people, policies, and procedures to take care of today, but
today was yesterday’s tomorrow. Even when a company isn’t resting on its laurels,
there is a completely human tendency to escape from the future’s uncertainties by
hunkering down in the details of the present or past. Some managers seem to welcome
daily nuisance distractions—they keep them busy. Others spend their time poking
around in history, studying financial statements and operating ratios. These matter,
but history is a compass, not a map. It is important to learn from the successes and
mistakes of the past, but managers’ primary role is to keep the organization focused on
the future. In so doing, they not only secure a place in it, they also take a bold step
toward capturing the entrepreneurial profits that market leaders deserve.
For example, promoters of the “Chunnel” between England and France did not
properly assess the gap between cash outflows and inflows. They couldn’t—there was
no crystal ball handy to predict the problems that cropped up. But the absence of a
crystal ball makes it even more important to plan for contingencies. In this case,
strategy was not enough. Cash was also important. Because the Chunnel is strategic
and significant, it will survive, but most likely with a different capital structure and a
different mix of creditors and owners. Along the way, the project’s investors have paid
a steep price.
Consider also ventures in solar, geothermal, and wind energy. Those enterprises
probably will be viable only when the cost of fossil fuel intersects with their costs.
Dozens of companies have failed waiting for this day, which is unlikely to dawn in my
lifetime or even in my six-year-old grandson’s.
These examples are not meant to be critical of visionaries; rather, they make the point
that a company that gets too far ahead of itself fails to restore its strategic focus just as
much as one mired in the present or fixated on the past.
The scarcest resources in any enterprise are people who are knowledgeable,
experienced, forward-looking, and able to lead. What a shame when these resources
are wasted on customers, products, services, and employees that are not strategically
important, significant, or profitable. You have to admire managers who are gung ho
about seizing new markets, landing new customers, and launching new products. But
when I hear their plans, I always ask, “What are you going to quit doing to free up the
resources for your new ventures?” The fact is, companies motivate and reward
managers to build, expand, and grow. They typically do not motivate and reward for
the cutting back that makes all that possible. The result is a confusion and tension that
is not strategic in the slightest.
Perhaps you’re inclined by now to give the strategic-renewal process a go. What next?
The first step is to be clear about who will be involved in the process. In my experience,
the business unit’s most senior manager must run the show—but it is not something he
or she should do alone. The process benefits from diversity of opinion and even from
dissension. For instance, when it comes to evaluating a customer’s strategic
importance, the more spirited the debate, the more informed the ultimate decision will
be.
When a team and its leader are in place, it is time to turn to the first target of the
evaluation process: customers. As I noted above, this step may involve some grouping
of customers. After all, Coca-Cola’s business units are not going to look one by one at
the thousands of consumers who pop open a soft drink each day. But they would do
well to define their customers as the channels through which they reach those
consumers. As you may recall, the specialty glass company first described in this article
—the one that went from 1,000 customers to 4—grouped it customers first by channel
and then within those groups by size and industry. This is not as complex as it sounds;
the logic of how to group customers often flows easily out of the logic of the business.
Thus a bank might group its customers by size—Fortune 1,000 companies, midsize
companies, and so forth down to individuals—and then by location or by the types of
services customers frequently use.
When it comes to grouping products and services, the same credo applies: Use
business logic. Thus a bank might group its products and services by type: mortgages,
check processing, investment instruments, and so on. A cosmetics manufacturer may
group its various products by channel, such as department store, drugstore, and mail
order. At the same time, it may also make sense not to group at all. The team at the
specialty glass manufacturer examined each of the company’s 4,000 SKUs one by one.
In situations where complexity is high, information is in dispute, and leading
indicators are dire, this painstaking exercise may be entirely necessary to get a handle
on the facts. Ordinarily, however, a commonsense grouping of products and services
will do.
Having grouped customers, products, and services, it is time to get down to the nitty-
gritty of the strategic-renewal process by evaluating them individually for their
strategic importance, significance, and profitability.
What do these terms mean exactly? We have briefly described all three, but now let’s
look at them in more depth.
Perhaps the best way for a business unit’s managers to get at strategic importance is
through a series of questions, the first of which is fundamental: What does our
organization do best? Does it provide personalized service, cost leadership, a particular
technology, or other expertise? When that question has been answered—and have no
doubt, finding agreement may require some rough sledding—the strategic-renewal
team must then consider whether there is a match between the area of superior
performance and the customer, product, or service under discussion. For instance, say
a strategic-renewal team determines that the company truly excels at personalized
service. The company may do a lot of other things well, but that’s its strongest
capability. The question then becomes, Does a particular customer value personalized
service? Or does a given product give us a chance to flaunt our service? The answers to
these questions often spark discussion about whether such a capability is the right one
given the other players in the field and their capabilities. Similarly, an examination of
these issues also opens the door to discussions about organizational structure: Are we
set up correctly to deliver what we’re good at? Do we have the right people,
information systems, and distribution channels in place, or can we get them there
within a reasonable amount of time and a reasonable budget? Ultimately, the
discussion of what a company is best at gets to the heart of who its target customers
should be in order to allow it to gain a sustainable competitive advantage.
Q4. Explain the strategies in management of culture in business
How can leaders address the issue of subcultures within the organization, or
should they?
Corporate leaders should instill a leading central culture that provides their
employees with boundaries and guidelines that support the vision and values
of the brand. However, leaders should also recognize, respect and support
the subcultures that develop within organizations. These subcultures
represent diversity in workstyles, ethnicity, values and norms that naturally
exist throughout the organization when a group of people share a common
situation. Some of the common situations that form subcultures include
geographic separation, functional specialties, different business units or
status within the organization, such as job type, hierarchy or tenure.
Generally, FDI is when a foreign entity acquires ownership or controlling stake in the shares
of a company in one country, or establishes businesses there.
It is different from foreign portfolio investment where the foreign entity merely buys equity
shares of a company.
In FDI, the foreign entity has a say in the day-to-day operations of the company.
FDI is not just the inflow of money, but also the inflow of technology, knowledge, skills and
expertise/know-how.
It is a major source of non-debt financial resources for the economic development of a
country.
FDI generally takes place in an economy which has the prospect of growth and also a
skilled workforce.
FDI has developed radically as a major form of international capital transfer since the last
many years.
The advantages of FDI are not evenly distributed. It depends on the host country’s systems
and infrastructure.
The determinants of FDI in host countries are:
Policy framework
International agreements
Privatisation policy
1. From April to August 2020, total Foreign Direct Investment inflow of USD 35.73 billion was
received. It is the highest ever for the first 5 months of a financial year. FDI inflow has
increased despite Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth contracted 23.9% in the first
quarter (April-June 2020).
2. FDI received in the first 5 months of 2020-21 (USD 35.73 billion) is 13% higher as compared
to the first five months of 2019-20 (USD 31.60 billion).
FDI in India
The investment climate in India has improved tremendously since 1991 when the government
opened up the economy and initiated the LPG strategies.
The improvement in this regard is commonly attributed to the easing of FDI norms.
Many sectors have opened up for foreign investment partially or wholly since the economic
liberalization of the country.
Currently, India ranks in the list of the top 100 countries in ease of doing business.
In 2019, India was among the top ten receivers of FDI, totalling $49 billion inflows, as per a
UN report. This is a 16% increase from 2018.
In February 2020, the DPIIT notifies policy to allow 100% FDI in insurance intermediaries.
In April 2020, the DPIIT came out with a new rule, which stated that the entity of nay
company that shares a land border with India or where the beneficial owner of investment
into India is situated in or is a citizen of such a country can invest only under the
Government route. In other words, such entities can only invest following the approval of
the Government of India
In early 2020, the government decided to sell a 100% stake in the national airline’s Air India.
Find more about this in the video below:
In the automatic route, the foreign entity does not require the prior approval of the government or
the RBI.
Examples:
Under the government route, the foreign entity should compulsorily take the approval of the
government. It should file an application through the Foreign Investment Facilitation Portal, which
facilitates single-window clearance. This application is then forwarded to the respective ministry or
department, which then approves or rejects the application after consultation with the DPIIT.
Examples:
There are some sectors where any FDI is completely prohibited. They are:
Agricultural or Plantation Activities (although there are many exceptions like horticulture,
fisheries, tea plantations, Pisciculture, animal husbandry, etc.)
Atomic Energy Generation
Nidhi Company
Lotteries (online, private, government, etc.)
Investment in Chit Funds
Trading in TDR’s
Any Gambling or Betting businesses
Cigars, Cigarettes, or any related tobacco industry
Housing and Real Estate (except townships, commercial projects, etc.)
Read more on FDI in retail here.
A transfer of ownership in an FDI deal that benefits any country that shares a border with India will
also need government approval.
Investors from countries not covered by the new policy only have to inform the RBI after a
transaction rather than asking for prior permission from the relevant government department.
The earlier FDI policy was limited to allowing only Bangladesh and Pakistan via the government
route in all sectors. The revised rule has now brought companies from China under the government
route filter.
Benefits of FDI
FDI brings in many advantages to the country. Some of them are discussed below.
Disadvantages of FDI
However, there are also some disadvantages associated with foreign direct investment. Some of
them are:
Companies Act
Securities and Exchange Board of India Act, 1992 and SEBI Regulations
Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA)
Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992
Civil Procedure Code, 1908
Indian Contract Act, 1872
Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
Competition Act, 2002
Income Tax Act, 1961
Foreign Direct Investment Policy (FDI Policy)
Important Government Authorities in India concerning FDI