PM Modi India's Best Hope for Economic Renaissance: WSJ
Washington: As Prime Minister Narendra Modi began his second US
trip in a year, a commentary in a leading daily said he remained
"India's best hope for an economic renaissance" while another suggested
that he may be a "diplomatic failure with India's neighbours."
"By reaching out directly to the American corporate sector, Modi hopes
to bolster economic ties with the US and project India as a prominent
investment destination," wrote Harsh V. Pant in a commentary in the Wall
Street Journal.
"Not surprisingly, Modi will spend much of his US tour currying favour
with American corporate heads," he wrote taking note of his meetings
with potential investors, media and CEOs of infrastructure and
manufacturing companies and tech leaders in Silicon Valley.
"Much like his other visits, Modi will look to Indian-Americans to
harness their support for India's economic regeneration," wrote Pant,
professor of defence studies at King's College London.
Taking note of investors' disappointment "at the government's inability
to pass important legislation," Pant largely blamed the opposition and
said, "Modi remains India's best hope for an economic renaissance."
"His popularity remains high and optimism about the future of the country under his leadership is soaring," he wrote.
"It is this cache of popular support that Modi will be leveraging as he
tries to convince US investors and policy makers that India's story has
just begun and that his leadership can write the next chapter."
"It may seem like a tall order, but Modi is nothing if not ambitious," Pant concluded.
On the other hand, the Washington Post wondered if Modi who "makes a lot
of overseas trips," is "a diplomatic failure with India's neighbours."
"At first, his rock star-like foreign visits served as a welcome break,
especially after the robotic and relatively timid visits abroad of his
predecessor, Manmohan Singh," the Post said in a report from New Delhi.
"But are Modi's sojourns abroad yielding real results?" it asked and
suggested, "Not if you look at India's neighbours such as Nepal and
Pakistan."
In India, many have begun "asking whether Modi's diplomacy is working,"
the Post report said even as it acknowledged that "Still, in almost all
popularity polls, Modi's foreign-policy initiatives continue to score
high."
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