Vision for Advancing and Anchoring Productive Sending of Income (VAAPSI)

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.


About The Authors

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Divyansh Shah

Divyansh Shah was part of the inaugural cohort of the RAAH Policy Fellowship. He is a graduate of B.A. (Hons.) History from St. Stephen’s College, University of Delhi.


Radhika Jain

Radhika Jain was part of the inaugural cohort of the RAAH Policy Fellowship. She completed her MSc in Economics from the University of York and is an incoming PhD candidate at the Università della Svizzera italiana (USI), Switzerland.


Simin Sanil

Simin Sanil was part of the inaugural cohort of the RAAH Policy Fellowship. She is pursuing an MSc in Public Policy at University College London and holds a bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from St. Stephen’s College, University of Delhi.

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