India

India unsafe for investors under Modi’s rule: Henley Report

New Delhi: The latest Henley Private Wealth Migration Report 2025 has revealed that investors and high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs) feel increasingly unsafe under the fascist Modi-led regime in India.

According to Kashmir Media Service, the report, which tracks global wealth migration trends, projects that around 3,500 HNWIs are expected to leave India this year, signaling a deepening brain drain and widespread lack of confidence in the country’s economic trajectory under Narendra Modi.

The Henley report lays bare the grim reality of India’s economy, stating that the mass departure of skilled professionals and wealthy elites is a direct consequence of the Modi government’s failed economic policies. It observes that India’s skilled class is deteriorating rapidly, as the government continues to prioritize its Hindutva-driven political agenda over genuine economic development.

The report estimates that Indian elites are preparing to transfer approximately $26 billion in wealth abroad, with the majority relocating to countries such as the United Kingdom, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates.

It further identifies corporate tax burdens, heavy regulatory pressures, and persistent political instability as the key factors driving investor unease. Despite tall claims by the Modi regime about economic progress, the growing exodus of billionaires suggests the reality is far from the glossy image portrayed by the Indian media.

The report concludes that Modi’s so-called development model is collapsing under the weight of its contradictions. Rather than building economic trust, his regime has bred social unrest, policy uncertainty, and public disillusionment, compelling India’s capitalist class to seek safer, more stable futures abroad.

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