"We have established NIIF. That is our first experience in trying to use the sovereign wealth. We (government) put out USD 3 billion in NIIF," Economic Affairs Secretary S C Garg said at an event here.
"We (would) raise the equal or higher amount from other participants, sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, other private sector participants to raise a corpus of about USD 7-8 billion, and then the co-investment will also come in, so we expect about USD 12-13 billion in investments in infrastructure mobilised through NIIF," he said.
He further said, the other thing taking shape now is to monetise the mature assets built through public money and utilise the proceed for newer projects.
"Lot of public assets which are yielding regular kind of return, it is possible to free up invested resources thereby converting them using the InVit (Infrastructure Investment Trust) model...so matured assets can be transfered to trusts," the secretary said.
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"Therefore, we are looking for newer means for financing infrastructure," he said, adding big money lies with a lot of pension funds.
"So how do we get them interested to invest, and therefore we are looking at a number of ways, policy on permitting FPIs, policy on AIF (Alternative Investment Funds)...So that is the area where we are trying to work. In short, in financing, these are the major issues and developments," he said.
He also said that banks funded infrastructure in a big way between 2008 and 2013 though many investments, which turned out to be less than robust and resulted in accumulation of huge non-performing assets.
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