For the purposes of FDI policy in private security agencies, it has defined the terms 'private security agencies', 'private security' and 'armoured car service'.
These terms will have the same meaning as provided under Private Security Agencies (Regulation) (PSAR) Act, 2005, the 109-page compendium said.
Also, the ministry has again retained the previous UPA regime's decision allowing foreign retailers to open multi-brand stores with 51 per cent ownership in its consolidated FDI policy.
The new compendium, which came into effect from yesterday, mentions all existing FDI policy decisions, as also the changes made over the last one year.
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These include changes in the foreign direct investment norms in over a dozen sectors including pensions, insurance, asset reconstruction company, e-commerce guidelines, single-brand retail, plantation segment and broadcasting.
The Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP), which is under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, is the nodal agency on FDI policy. It compiles all policies related to India's FDI regime into a single document to make it simple and easy for investors to understand.
FDI in India grew by 29 per cent to USD 40 billion in 2015-16 as against USD 30.93 billion in the previous fiscal.