Ajay Banga, Chairman of US-India Business Council and President and CEO of MasterCard Worldwide, has written to Obama, with a copy of the letter to US Secretary of State John Kerry, urging them to raise the issue with Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh when they meet him next month.
In his letter, provided exclusively to rediff.com, Banga has written to Obama: “We hope that in the upcoming meetings with your Indian counterparts you and your administration will drive home the importance of addressing the key Indian practices at issue and assure them that this country is prepared to be India’s full partner provided that India does its share. We know that addressing such a demanding agenda will be tough,” he said, adding, “We ask for attention to these issues because they are timely and important to India’s pursuit of growth and to US interests.”
Deputy Secretary of State William Burns, who visited New Delhi in advance of the US-India Strategic Dialogue scheduled for next month in the Indian capital, had delivered a letter from Obama to Dr Singh inviting him to visit Washington next month. The New Delhi meeting will be co-chaired by Kerry and India’s External Affairs Minister Salman Khursheed.
“In June, the prime minister of India and senior figures in his foreign affairs and national security teams will meet you and your administration in this country and in India. We, the 350 corporations that comprise the US-India Business Council, welcome these meetings and believe they offer a timely and excellent opportunity to reinforce the US-India relationship, a cause to which you and your predecessors have devoted so much effort and which represents a strategic achievement of the first order for the United States.
“Your meetings come at a time when US business is facing a series of significant challenges in its ability to enter and compete in Indian markets,” he wrote, and added, “The sessions, which will take place with India’s leadership, come at an important time in the political calendar,” Banga said.
“India will proceed to general elections in the next year. Much needs to be done before that date to strengthen the relationship, especially the economic and commercial aspects of it. Similarly, much has to occur for India and the United States to be ready to deal with South Asia’s many challenges, especially those which will follow in the wake of America’s draw-down in Afghanistan," he said, adding that as much as "cooperation in the struggle with terror, events in Pakistan and the evolution of India’s and our relations with Myanmar and China require close attention."
Banga acknowledged that “economic ties between the US and India have come a long way over the past two decades. Two-way trade in goods and services has boomed, reaching $100 billion a year; defence trade alone in just this last decade now exceeds $10 billion, with much more to follow; investment by American companies in India and Indian corporations in America now exceeds $50 billion.
“Conservatively, we at USIBC estimate a half million American jobs depend on our new levels of trade and investment with India, and these developments are only curtain raisers. While Indian progress has slowed over the past two years, the prospects for renewed growth in the years ahead are extremely positive. An Indian middle-class, now surpassing 300 million with a purchasing power of greater than $30,000/year per person, represents a huge market opportunity for American exporters and investors,” Banga said.
Warning shot
But he warned: “We
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