Nasscom Forum Drives India-US Tech Partnership After Historic Trade Deal

The Nasscom US CEO Forum convened in Washington D.C. to advance a tech-led economic partnership following the recent India-US trade deal. Industry leaders and policymakers discussed deepening collaboration in AI, innovation, and building trusted supply chains. A central goal is supporting the joint target of achieving $500 billion in bilateral trade. The forum emphasized that Indian tech firms are key partners for US enterprises, driving local job creation and energy security initiatives.

Key Points: India-US Tech Partnership Advances After Trade Deal

  • Enhancing innovation & AI collaboration
  • Building trusted tech supply chains
  • Catalyzing local US job creation
  • Targeting $500 billion bilateral trade
2 min read

Nasscom US CEO Forum charts tech-led economic partnership after historic trade deal

Nasscom US CEO Forum charts tech-led economic collaboration focusing on AI, jobs, and a $500 billion trade target between India and America.

"India and the US have a generational opportunity to build a trusted technology alliance across AI, semiconductors, and digital infrastructure. - Amit Chadha"

New Delhi, Feb 5

Nasscom US CEO Forum on Thursday held its first industry engagement after the trade deal announcement between India and America and discussed a tech-led economic partnership.

Convened at Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on February 4-5, the Forum's third meeting brought together leading Indian technology business leaders and senior US policymakers. The leaders deliberated on enhancing innovation, AI, trusted supply chains, workforce development, and local job creation across the US.

"The India-US trade deal provides much-needed macro predictability at a time when technology, talent, and trust are central to global competitiveness. Indian technology companies are already delivering measurable outcomes for the US economy - high-quality jobs, regional investment, and innovation at scale," said Rajesh Nambiar, President, Nasscom.

"The Nasscom US CEO Forum is focused on moving this partnership from collaboration to co-creation, anchored in data, accountability, and long-term value creation," he added.

The Forum discussions underscored the opportunity for deeper India-US collaboration across the AI value chain, aligned with the Pax Silica coalition led by the US.

As AI adoption accelerates globally, Indian technology firms are well-positioned to expand their role across key layers, particularly enterprise and custom applications, consulting and engineering services, and emerging opportunities in silicon design and advanced platforms, supporting trusted, secure, and scalable AI ecosystems.

This collaboration is expected to directly benefit most of the Fortune 500 companies, while catalysing local job creation across multiple US states.

The industry has set its sights on supporting the joint target of $500 billion in India-US trade.

Energy security also emerged as a strategic priority, with the US scaling AI-critical energy capacity and India integrating green and nuclear energy to support next-generation data centres.

Indian technology companies are increasingly contributing to AI-driven energy optimisation, grid analytics, and digital infrastructure, reinforcing the resilience of the US innovation ecosystem.

"India and the US have a generational opportunity to build a trusted technology alliance across AI, semiconductors, and digital infrastructure. Indian tech companies are deeply embedded in the success of US enterprises, supporting the majority of Fortune 500 firms while creating local jobs across US states," said Amit Chadha, CEO & MD - L&T Technology Services & Vice Chair -Nasscom US CEO Forum.

"By supporting the joint US-India target of a bilateral trade number of $500 billion, we can help shape a more resilient, innovation-led future for both economies," he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone working in the US tech sector, I've seen firsthand the value Indian engineering teams bring. Focusing on co-creation, not just outsourcing, is a smart move. The $500 billion trade target is ambitious but achievable with this focus on AI and green energy.
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Ananya R
While the partnership sounds great, I hope the "local job creation across the US" doesn't come at the cost of job creation in India. Our own economy needs a boost. The focus should be mutual growth, not a one-sided benefit.
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Vikram M
Moving into silicon design and advanced platforms is key. We've been strong in software services for decades. Time to move up the value chain and become true partners in core technology development. Jai Hind!
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Karthik V
The energy security angle is interesting. If Indian companies can help with AI-driven grid optimization for the US, we should definitely apply that tech to our own power sector here. Our grids need that smart upgrade desperately.
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Michael C
"Trusted supply chains" is the most important phrase here. In the current geopolitical climate, having a reliable partner like India in tech is strategic for the US. This deal provides much-needed stability.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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