Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
International

US-India Trade Body Fully Backs Modi's Digital Initiatives

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Sep, 2015 12:09 PM
    Ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Silicon Valley, the US-India Business Council has expressed support for his key initiatives such as Digital India, Start up India, Stand up India, and Skill India.
     
    Modi's goal of making India a top 50 country for ease of doing business "will be instrumental to attracting greater foreign investment to the country", the largest US bilateral trade association said in a statement on Friday.
     
    "The Council and member companies are eager to support Prime Minister Modi's initiatives in all ways possible," said USIBC president Mukesh Aghi.
     
    "Together we can provide jobs, opportunity, and prosperity to both of our countries and this is the time to seize the opportunities and potential of our relationship."
     
    Made up of over 300 top US and Indian companies, USIBC will host Modi for a dinner reception in San Jose, California on Saturday with incoming USIBC chairman John T. Chambers, executive chairman of Cisco.
     
    The event will provide Silicon Valley-based companies an opportunity to interact with the prime minister and promote avenues for future collaboration with India, USIBC said.
     
    "Modi will be looking for investments, jobs, and a platform to tell the world that India is open to do business - especially in the technology field, where it already has an impressive $100 billion IT industry," Aghi said.
     
    "We absolutely agree with the prime minister's goal of making India a top 50 country for ease of doing business," he said.
     
    "Such a climate will be instrumental to attracting greater foreign investment to the country."
     
    "All of the prime minister's programmes ultimately have a 'digital' focus -- Smart Cities, the national financial inclusion plan, Skill India and Start up India, Stand up India," said Aghi.
     
    Digital India, he said, is a vast and expansive vision and the key to fulfilling the economic and social progress of the nation.
     
    "US companies, especially those located in the Silicon Valley, have a great deal to bring to these efforts, beginning with their technology, capital, intellectual property, and desire to be long-term players in India's future."
     
    "Today, around 15 percent of startups in Silicon Valley have been founded by Indians," Aghi said.
     
    "They represent a cross border flow of ideas, information and knowledge as well as the progress of the US-India partnership in recent years," he said, adding that this "community is eager to be a part of India's growth story and as a result, the Silicon Valley is perfectly poised to help transform India into a more networked and connected society".

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing
     Pakistani cricketer turned politician Imran Khan has asked Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif why he is not speaking up against Indian "aggression" along the frontier...

    Imran Khan asks Sharif to speak up against border firing

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe
    MADRID - A Spanish nursing assistant may be the first person in the ongoing epidemic to catch Ebola outside of Africa, but she probably won't be the last, experts warn.

    WHO: Spain's Ebola case won't be last in Europe

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN
    Raising the Kashmir issue yet again at the UN, Pakistan dragged the UN Military Observer Group (UNMOGIP) into the current situation along the Line of Control where cross-border shelling has flared up....

    Pakistan again raises Kashmir in UN

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights
    Twitter has sued the US government for restricting the microblogging site from sharing online government surveillance reports with its users....

    Twitter sues US government over surveillance rights

    Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student

    Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student
    A British teacher has been banned from teaching for five years for sending her bare-breasted pictures to a 16-year-old student....

    Teacher banned for sending topless selfie to student

    US federal court revokes ban on same-sex marriages

    US federal court revokes ban on same-sex marriages
    A federal court in the US has passed a ruling revoking the ban on same-sex marriages in Idaho and Nevada a day after the country's Supreme Court...

    US federal court revokes ban on same-sex marriages