This policy brief examines India’s remittance economy and proposes a structural policy framework to redirect remittance inflows toward productive investment.
India currently receives approximately $129–135 billion annually in remittances, making it the world’s largest remittance recipient and a major beneficiary of diaspora capital. While these inflows significantly support macroeconomic stability by financing nearly 42% of the merchandise trade deficit, their developmental impact remains weak due to poor “productive absorption.”
This arises as a consequence of a structural absorption gap. Therein, remittances are disproportionately directed toward household consumption, residential real estate, and gold rather than employment-generating sectors such as SMEs, manufacturing, or agriculture. This gap is only exacerbated due to inter-state inequalities in migration and existing economic development.
A major structural shift identified is the growing dominance of advanced economies, especially the United States and United Kingdom, as remittance source countries. These corridors generate substantially higher per-migrant remittance values due to the concentration of Indian professionals in skilled sectors. The brief argues that India’s future remittance strategy must therefore target a digitally connected, higher-income diaspora interested in structured long-term investments rather than short-term transfers.
The central recommendation, following a review of possible alternatives, is the creation of the Remittance Co-Investment Zone (RCIZ) framework. RCIZ proposes geographically designated productive investment zones in high out-migration districts where NRIs invest through Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs). Under the model, NRIs hold 74% equity while states contribute land through concessional leases and retain 26% equity. Investments are channelled through a new RBI-regulated NRI Productive Investment Account (NPIA), designed to ring-fence funds for productive sectors while offering preferential taxation and repatriation rights.
The framework emphasises institutional coordination, phased implementation, public accountability, and performance-linked incentives. By Year 5, the policy targets ₹50,000 crore in productive NRI capital mobilisation through a 25:1 leverage ratio on a ₹2,000 crore public corpus. The brief concludes that RCIZ transforms remittances from a passive macroeconomic stabiliser into an active instrument for employment generation, enterprise development, and regional economic transformation.
Key Insights
- Government’s Core Decision:
- How should India design incentives, institutions, and financial pipelines to redirect a portion of remittance inflows from low-productivity uses toward high-productivity investments, without reducing inflows or constraining household autonomy?
- Operational Policy Question:
- What is the minimum set of interventions required to shift even 10-20% of annual remittance inflows (~$15-25B) into productive sectors with high employment and GDP multipliers?
RAAH does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of RAAH.



