'Make in India' Dominates Modi's First Full Day in US
NEW YORK: When Thursday dawns here, Prime Minister Narendra Modi
is scheduled to launch a full day of economic diplomacy, cajoling titans
of industry, finance and media to invest in his hallmark "Make in
India" program.
Modi, who arrived here Wednesday evening local time to a rousing welcome
from members of the diaspora, has a double agenda for the five-day
visit spanning the nation's two coasts: High-level diplomacy as he
attends UN summit of heads of state and government, and promoting his
"Make in India" and "Digital India" initiatives.
Outside of the UN, Vikas Swarup, the external affairs ministry
spokesman, told reporters here Wednesday, "Start-ups, innovation and
manufacturing are the thrust areas of this visit."
Ambassador to the US Arun Singh said that the focus on the economic
dimension in the visit follows the strategic and commercial dialogue
that ended this week in Washington. Having developed political and
strategic ties, it was time for the commercial dimension, especially
with the goal of expanding bilateral trade to 500 billion per year that
was set by President Barack Obama during his Republic Day visit, he
added.
After an evening of informal meetings on Wednesday with community
members from several places, including New York and Chicago metro areas
and Georgia, Modi switches gears Thursday focusing on his economic
agenda.
Modi's manufacturing agenda will have a special place in his meetings on
Thursday. Singh told reporters that his meetings will be with leaders
in the finance, infrastructure and manufacturing sectors.
His first meeting of the day is a roundtable with many leaders of the
finance sector at Hotel Waldorf Astoria where he is staying.
In the evening he is to meet Marillyn Hewson, the CEO of Lockheed
Martin, the aerospace, defence and security company. India has bought
giant C130 Super Hercules transport planes from Lockheed Martin.
That is to be followed by a meeting with Mike Burke, the CEO of AECOM,
an infrastructure engineering and design company that works on an array
of projects ranging from construction to transportation, and from
environment to mining, oil and gas.
Modi caps off the day with a dinner with 40 CEOs of major Fortune 500
companies, mostly in manufacturing and infrastructure areas, Swarup
said.
Earlier in the afternoon, he has a roundtable with media industry
leaders that is hosted by Rupert Murdoch, the executive chairman of News
Corp. and 21st Century Fox which owns Star TV. The theme of the
meeting, which will include executives from other companies, is "Media,
Technology and Communications - Growth Story for India".
He also meets in the evening with Michael Bloomberg, who owns the news
and financial information and media company that bear his name.
Bloomberg, who is United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's Special
Envoy for Cities and Climate Change, visited India earlier this year to
promote sustainable development and international investments in the
renewable energy sector.
Ajay Banga, the CEO of MasterCard, who is also the chairman of the
US-India Business Council, is also scheduled to meet Modi. The only
diplomatic meeting of the day scheduled as of Wednesday is with Guyanese
Prime Minister David Granger, whose country's population of about
800,000 is 43 percent of Indian descent.
On Friday, Modi turns to high-level diplomacy. He is to address the
first session of the UN Summit, which celebrates the 70th anniversary of
the founding of the world body and undertakes a massive programme to
eradicate poverty and hunger through sustainable development. It is
called Agenda 2030 for the deadline to achieve the programme's 17 goals
that include protecting the environment and empowering women.
India's Permanent Representative to the UN, Asoke Kumar Mukerji said
that India is the broad canvas for the programme and it relies a lot on
India for its success.
Modi has scheduled bilateral meetings with King Abdullah II of Jordan,
Bhutan Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay, Swedish Prime Minister Stefan
Lofven and Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades.
He starts off Saturday on the East Coast with a summit of the G-4, a
grouping of India, Brazil, Germany and Japan that works for UN Security
Council expansion and mutually supports one another for permanent seats.
Mukerji said this is the first time in more than a decade the G-4 was
meeting at the level of prime ministers and presidents.
Mukerji said they will focus on building on the recent UN General
Assembly endorsement of a negotiating text on Security Council reform
and decide on the way to go forward. The negotiations are scheduled to
start in the first half of November. The General Assembly overcame the
first major hurdle earlier this month by endorsing the document on which
to base the discussions.
Modi then flies off to the West Coast, where the focus will shift from high-level diplomacy to high-tech.
He has meetings scheduled with CEOs Tim Cook of Apple, Satya Nadela of
Microsoft, Shantanu Narayen of Adobe, and Sundar Pichai of Google,
executive chairmen Paul Jacobs of Qualcomm and John Chambers of CISCO,
and Venkatesh Shukla, the president of The Indus Entrepreneurs (TiE), a
non-profit organisation.
On Sunday, he is scheduled to visit Facebook, where social media's role in development will be the topic.
At Google, another stop in the Silicon Valley, Modi will look at their
health care and grid programmes. A highpoint of the visit will be a
24-hour hackathon during which programmers at Google and in India will
try to develop apps or programmes relating to the "Digital India"
project.
Modi is to meet US Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz and participate in a
roundtable at Stanford University on renewable energy. Others on his
agenda of meetings there are California Governor Edmund Brown and Salman
Khan, the founder of the Khan Academy, the online education service.
With NASSCOM, Modi will discuss creating an ecosystem for start-ups.
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