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  • India to go ahead with plan to expand its n-energy: Sharma

    Published on June 24, 2011

    India has assured corporate America that it has no plans to halt its nuclear energy projects in view of the recent damage to a nuclear power plan in Japan after it was hit by a tsunami.

    “We are very clear it is an absolute must in the bouquet of energy resources which have to be accessed,” Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma told a gathering of top US c corporate leaders and those from the US government at the annual summit of the US India Business Council (USIBC).

    Sharma told the USIBC meeting that he was recently asked if nuclear energy in India would be effected in view of the recent incident in Japan, “My answer was no,” Sharma said, adding that nuclear energy in India is going to expand.

    “We are very clear that we not be left behind again in the field of technologies,” Sharma said.

    “We want you to be with us in achieving what we have set out to achieve,” he urged the corporate leaders of the United States.

    “That would be a notable contribution in the partnership between our two great countries,” he said.

    Sharma told US businesses that India is committed in enhancing this partnership.

    “Let us try and give more substance to this partnership and bring about changes which will be good for both our countries,” he said.

    A day earlier, Sharma addressed a gathering of policy makers, economists and scholars at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies.

    He highlighted the increasing role of emerging economies in the perspective of the financial and economic crisis, which is causing a rebalancing of the global economy.

    Sharma also stressed the necessity to build and strengthen bilateral business and institutional partnerships between the two countries.

    He informed the audience about Indias plans to create National Manufacturing and Investment Zones, which would become hubs of innovation and manufacturing.

    On 21st June, Sharma held a CEO Industry Roundtable in New York where he interacted with select leaders of investment firms and big businesses with keen interest in commercial opportunities in India.

    Exempt professionals from social security tax: India to US

    India on Friday asked the US to move ahead with an agreement which would exempt professionals from payment of security taxes to mitigate the impact of a visa fee hike last year.

    Both the sides are negotiating Bilateral Totalisation Agreement (BTA), which once signed, would benefit lakhs of Indians who are working in America and paying social security but are unable to get any benefit out of it.

    The issue, which has an impact on the Indian IT industry, came up for discussion between Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma and William Daley, Chief of Staff in the US administration in Washington.

    “He (Sharma) stressed on the need to make progress on the BTA and to mitigate the impact of discriminatory measures such as the Border Security Legislation and Zadroga Bill enacted last year, which would unfairly tax Indian companies,” a statement from India’s Commerce Ministry said.

    Under the agreement, professionals of both the countries would be exempted from social security taxes when they go to work for a short period in the other country.

    Sharma was in Washington to attend India-USIBC meeting.

    Under the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, last year, America had imposed 2 per cent tax on US government procurement from foreign companies and also extended the present visa fee on certain categories by one more year from 2014 to 2015.

    The US had also hiked visa fees in certain categories of H1B and L1, which was mainly used by Indian IT professionals, to fund security measures along the US-Mexico border.

    India has time and again said raised its concern on these issues. The USA’s move have caused considerable concern and apprehension in the USD 60 billion Indian IT industry, which gets over 60 per cent of its business from the US.

    Further, Sharma has invited investments from the US in sectors like agriculture, infrastructure and agro-processing.

    There is a requirement for investment to bring about the Second Green Revolution in India and to develop the agro-processing and food processing sectors, Sharma said.

    “There are many gaps in the infrastructure which present opportunities for investment, especially in energy, roads and power,” he said, adding India will be spending around USD 1 trillion on the development of infrastructure in the next Five-Year Plan beginning in 2012.

    He also emphasised on the need to give strength to the ongoing technological collaboration between the countries through institutional linkages and co-development of technologies.

    Sharma said that tremendous opportunities are available for US companies in sectors like manufacturing, pharmaceuticals and R&D for investment and partnership with Indian firms.

    The USIBC is the premier business advocacy organisation in the US and is committed to strengthening US-India commercial ties and deepening two-way trade.

    It comprises 370 of the top US companies investing in India.

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