|
India -
U. S. Economic Dialogue
Released by the U.S. State
Department
Washington, DC
November 14, 2001
- In conjunction with the November 9 meeting between President Bush
and Prime Minister Vajpayee, the U.S. and India announce the expansion
and intensification of the U.S.-India Economic Dialogue. This is one of
the most important manifestations of the Administration’s commitment to
fundamentally transform U.S.-India bilateral relations.
- The Dialogue was inaugurated in March 2000. Intended to
institutionalize economic cooperation, it was originally comprised of
three fora -- a "Financial and Economic Forum," a "Commercial Dialogue,"
and a "Working Group on Trade."
- The two sides agreed during Prime Minister Vajpayee’s visit to
expand the Economic Dialogue by significantly enhancing private sector
interaction, and by adding separate energy and environment components.
Recognizing the relationship between energy and environment issues, we
anticipate interaction between them.
- The Dialogue’s private sector counterpart will broaden and deepen
ties between the Indian and American business communities and enable the
government-to-government discussions to benefit more fully from their
practical and specific experiences.
- U.S. National Economic Council Director Larry Lindsey and Indian
National Security Adviser Brajesh Mishra serve as Coordinators for the
Dialogue. Under Secretary of State Alan Larson and Dr. Prodipto Ghosh,
Additional Secretary in the Prime Minister’s Office, serve as Executive
Secretaries responsible for advancing the Dialogue, including especially
on issues that cut across ministerial lines.
- Treasury Secretary O'Neill and Finance Minister Sinha held the
initial Financial and Economic Forum meeting in April and will meet
again this month to discuss issues including Forum next steps. USTR
Zoellick and Commerce Minister Maran renewed the Working Group on Trade
during their August meetings in New Delhi.
- The U.S.-India Business Council is serving as convener for the U.S.
side of the private sector counterpart, pulling together participants
from a variety of sectors, companies, and organizations. The Indian
private sector is currently developing a structure for its
participation.
- Mr. Lindsey and Mr. Mishra directed Under Secretary Larson and Dr.
Ghosh to ensure the Economic Dialogue provides special attention to
issues related to high technology, infrastructure, and knowledge-based
industries.
|