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India should fully open up supposedly sensitive sectors: Report

arp2041

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India should fully open "even supposedly sensitive" sectors such as finance, defence, atomic energy and FDI, a leading US think-tank said today.

It also stressed that Washington and New Delhi cannot afford to fail as it was important to maintain "favourable" balance of power in Asia.

Observing that the evolving India-US strategic partnership holds great potential for both countries, the prestigious Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, stressed that both sides must now take steps to make the partnership fruitful.

In a detailed report, it came out with a set of recommendations for both the Manmohan Singh Government and the Obama Administration, which is now preparing for its second term.

Recommendations for India include expanding the basis for collaboration, undertaking planned 2nd-generation economic reforms, encouraging foreign direct investment, improving defence cooperation with key states and using its influence with Iran to abandon its nuclear weapons program.

"There is no conceivable reason today why the Indian state should not fully open even supposedly sensitive sectors such as finance, defence, and atomic energy to FDI," it said.

The report "Opportunities unbound: Sustaining the transformation in US-Indian relations" recommends US to explore a free-trade agreement with India, build up India's defence capabilities.

It noted that no American administration in recent years has ever sought to inveigle India into either a containment strategy or a military alliance aimed at China.

"The US strategy toward India is not aimed at getting New Delhi to do anything against Beijing other than what it would do anyway for its own reasons.

"Helping India thrive as a strong, democratic, (even if perpetually) independent state is what the transformation of US-Indian relations is actually all about," the report said.

"Freed from the encumbrances of their enervating nuclear disagreement, the United States and India now have the opportunity to nurture their deep-rooted shared interests that make a genuine strategic partnership possible," Ashley Tellis, eminent American foreign policy expert and author of the report said.

"Both sides have only just scratched the surface of their potential cooperation. But with the removal of the most important impediment facing their bilateral relationship during the last thirty years--India's exclusion from the global nonproliferation regime--both governments need to get down to business if they are to achieve the meaningful strategic partnership that eluded them throughout the Cold War," he wrote.

"At a time when the United States and India face the common challenge of maintaining a favourable balance of power in Asia, they cannot afford to fail," he concluded.

WASHINGTON: The report further said: "Sustain leadership attention. Even if New Delhi does not reciprocate every US initiative and retains its traditionally independent foreign policy, the United States should devote senior leadership attention and create effective bureaucratic arrangements to expand the relationship with India."

"Seek a deeper partnership on Afghanistan. Washington should encourage the Indian government to increase its political and material contributions to the effort in Afghanistan," the report's recommendations for US said.

"The evolving US-Indian strategic partnership holds great potential for both countries. India's economic growth and its ties to the United States can assist its global rise, which contributes to keeping the peace in Asia, provided New Delhi and Washington sustain concerted cooperation.

"And India's emerging markets promise to be the key instrument for enlarging India's power while remaining a rich opportunity for US businesses,"

"The 2008 US-India Civil Nuclear Agreement did away with the biggest obstacle in the relationship--India's murky status in the global nonproliferation regime. Both sides must now take steps to make the partnership fruitful," he said.

India should fully open up supposedly sensitive sectors: Report - The Economic Times
 
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India should fully open "even supposedly sensitive" sectors such as finance, defence, atomic energy and FDI, a leading US think-tank said today.

Of course they did. The US really is shameless sometimes!
 
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Yeah I think its a good idea as long as the Indian govt has the ability to put the proper checks and balances in place but the Indian govt is not competent yet. The article points out a lot of areas that India needs to develop further in order to sustain growth and position itself into a powerful position. The US can help India big time, and INdia can help the US economically big time. Ask yourself, would yuou prefer to be China;s dumping ground or US's investment destination? Again being keeping an eye on the ball is imperative but that is the problem also. India political system is fuked up!
 
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Walmart modus operandi is capture large markets then drive prices down by bringing in chinese and bangladeshi goods which will kill domestic manufacturers.
 
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What he says:
India should fully open "even supposedly sensitive" sectors such as finance, defence, atomic energy and FDI, a leading US think-tank said today.

What he means:

Executives from Morgon Stanley, Allianz, Metlife.., Boeing, Lockheed Martin.., GE Westinghouse..., Walmart.. are bugging me. Somebody please handle them :P
 
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How about FDI in intelligence also......:hitwall:
 
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India should fully open "even supposedly sensitive" sectors such as finance, defence, atomic energy and FDI, a leading US think-tank said today.

Opening up Finance sectors to those Americans is a sure shot disaster, hell no. Same applies for atomic energy and FDI in retail. But i don't see any problem in FDI in defense sectors.
 
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Opening up Finance sectors to those Americans is a sure shot disaster, hell no. Same applies for atomic energy and FDI in retail. But i don't see any problem in FDI in defense sectors.

Same Opinion.

Opening Finance sectors means when the next recession comes India would not be that isolated as it was some years back.

Opening atomic sector means we will be just waiting for another Bhopal to happen.

FDI in retail has already got approval (51%).

But FDI in defense is THE most important one, since at 26% cap of FDI in defense, no nation will share sensitive military technology, i think we can increase it to 49% with majority stakes still with Indian companies.
 
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Do they think we are morons...now that i think about it...Congress is in power... :confused:
 
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Someone is drooling and it is showing.
 
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