Secretary Locke Arrives in Mumbai for Final Stop of High-Tech Trade Mission

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Locke with Indian CEOs in Mumbai

Locke meets with Chairman Ambani of Reliance Industries and other Indian CEOs

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke returned to India’s business center today for the final stop of his high-technology trade mission to India – which he announced during President Obama’s trip last November. Locke is joined by a delegation of 24 U.S. businesses seeking to promote their technologies and services related to civil nuclear energy, civil aviation, defense and homeland security, and information and communications technology to India. Locke is the first Cabinet secretary to travel to India after President Obama’s visit.

At a speech he delivered to members of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) and the American Chamber of Commerce (AMCHAM) in Mumbai, Locke highlighted the U.S.-India commercial relationship and encouraged development of new business opportunities between the members of the delegation and their Indian counterparts. He also talked about the great progress India has made in opening its markets to U.S. companies but he noted that much more work needs to be done.

“If India continues its walk down ‘the path of reform,’ if it continues to become more open to the investments and the innovations of foreign companies – like the 24 companies I have with me this week – it will stand a much better chance of meeting the needs of its people and of helping to lead the global economy in the 21st century,” said Secretary Locke. “We've made important progress this week, not just to lay the groundwork for more sales of U.S. goods in India, but to take another real step towards strengthening the bonds between the governments, the businesses and the people of India and the United States.”

While in Mumbai, Locke also met with Indian CEOs, including Chairman Mukesh Ambani of Reliance Industries, who are part of the U.S.-India CEO Forum as a follow up from their meeting during President Obama’s trip to India in November. Locke solicited the group’s goals for the 2011 forum and they discussed a wide range of critical issues, including clean energy, standards and education.

Later in the afternoon, Locke delivered the keynote address at the National Association of Software and Service Companies’ (NASSCOM) India Leadership Forum. The NASSCOM forum is one of the flagship events for the tech industry in India where business leaders from more than 20 countries participate to share their views and strategies, and discuss the opportunities and challenges that lay ahead in the tech sector.

The mission is the first Secretary-led business development mission to India since 1997. It advances President Obama’s National Export Initiative (NEI) which aims to double U.S. exports by 2015 supporting several million U.S. jobs.   

The pace of trade between the United States and India is accelerating.  Between 2002 and 2009, U.S. goods exports to India quadrupled, growing from $4.1 billion to more than $16.4 billion.  Through the first eleven months of 2010, U.S. merchandise exports to India totaled $17.6 billion, up 17 percent from the same period in 2009.  With economic growth estimates at about 9.7 percent in 2010, India is a key market for achieving the Obama administration’s export goal.

Visit the Commerce Department’s India trade mission website at http://trade.gov/indiamission2011/index.asp for updates on the trade mission.

Secretary Locke addresses CEOs of Indian Companies at FICCI event in Mumbai Secretary Locke and CEOs of Indian Companies Take Questions

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Meeting with Secretary Locke at Nasscom conference in Mumbai tod

Hello Secretary Locke thank you for meeting with us at the NASSCOM conference in Mumbai India. I in particular was proud to see a fellow Asian American representing the US at the largest gathering of Indian IT professionals.

As you are aware, the Indian IT industry has the US as its largest market and also its largest and most important partner.

As a CEO of a US IT firm, I was pleased to note that you do not intent to raise barriers to US companies outsourcing to India or elsewhere. My company PortaEnterprise has 1900 employees all based in the US. We resort to outsourcing only for short term projects and not as a means to avoid hiring additional professionals in the US.

As a CEO I need to be afforded the luxury to set up shop anywhere in the world, where it makes technical and business sense to do.

In the spirit of what the US is all about, the US government out not to restrict the options of a company. As a Democrat I always owned Japanese cars. Just because the were and are good. After all what is a US made car: a GM car assembled in Mexico or a Toyota made in Fremont California ??

Once again, thank you for coming to NASSCOM and I was proud to meet you Secretary Locke.

Thank you

Deep Tej
CEO
PortaEnterprise

obama's export goals

this is a good way to meet the presidents export goal. we ned to fully fund this to help president obama meet his goal and we help a country that really need the goods that we are exporting them.