Mumbai, July 12 -- In April this year, a Singapore-based fund manager on a visit to India made headlines after he fell into an open manhole, just a few metres from a shopping mall in Mumbai's Lower Parel, once home to the city's textile mills and now a bustling business district. The man survived but the incident was a grim reminder of the many inherent risks that come with investing in India. Mumbai, the country's financial capital that boasts of the world's 10th largest stock exchange and headquarters of multibillion-dollar conglomerates, is also an example of India's crumbling infrastructure. The city is a reflection of the many contrasts that make up the Indian economy. On the one hand, investors are attracted by the country's promise o...