India has jumped 30 places to rank 100th in the World Bank's 'ease of doing business' ranking, helped by a slew of reforms in taxation, licensing, investor protection and bankruptcy resolution.
"The robust rise in India's rankings from 130 to 100 is phenomenal. Game changing reforms by the government are finally bearing fruit, making India one of the most compelling investment destinations globally," metal and mining conglomerate Vedanta Group Chairman Anil Agarwal said.
Agarwal said the government has introduced comprehensive measures to simplify and broaden the tax net, enhance transparency and increase the share of manufacturing in the country.
"I believe that the time is also opportune to roll-out reforms in the mineral sector. After all, oil imports forms the majority of Indias forex outflow. The Government can entrust the private sector to boost energy & resources self- sufficiency," he said.
"I have no doubt that this is Indias decade. Structural reforms will be instrumental in making it Indias century," Agarwal said.
India, which was ranked 130th among the 190 nations for the last two years, is "one of the top 10 improvers in this year's assessment, having implemented reforms in 8 out of 10 'doing business' indicators," the World Bank report said. This is the first time India has broken into top 100 nations.