US-India Trade Breakthrough: Niti Aayog CEO Reveals November Deadline

Niti Aayog CEO B.V.R Subrahmanyam has revealed that US-India trade negotiations could see a major breakthrough by the end of November. He announced the National Manufacturing Mission will become operational this month, creating sectoral clusters across 15 sectors. India needs to increase its investment rate to 35-36% of GDP to maintain 8-9% growth, up from the current 30-31%. The CEO emphasized that India must remain an open economy despite global tariff pressures while focusing on skilling and reducing bureaucracy.

Key Points: US India Trade Deal Breakthrough Expected by November End

  • US-India trade negotiations on track for potential breakthrough by November end
  • National Manufacturing Mission to create 15 sector clusters across 75 locations
  • India needs 35-36% investment rate for sustained 8-9% GDP growth
  • Foreign investors increasingly drawn to India's market and cost competitiveness
2 min read

US-India trade negotiations may see breakthrough by November end: Niti Aayog CEO

Niti Aayog CEO predicts US-India trade breakthrough this month, reveals National Manufacturing Mission details, and outlines India's economic growth strategy.

"Hopefully, by the end of the month, we may hear some news on that front - B.V.R Subrahmanyam"

Mumbai, Nov 7

NITI Aayog CEO B.V.R Subrahmanyam on Friday said that the ongoing US-India trade negotiations may see a breakthrough by the end of the month, adding that the country must lift its investment rate to 35–36 per cent of the GDP.

"Hopefully, by the end of the month, we may hear some news on that front,” he said at a media event here, adding that the negotiations are on track.

He said the National Manufacturing Mission will be operational by November, proposing sectoral clusters across 15 sectors and 75 locations to establish globally-competitive manufacturing hubs.

He opined that India needs to increase its investment rate to 35–36 per cent of the GDP each year to maintain growth of 8–9 per cent, up from the current rate of approximately 30–31 per cent.

India's economic growth positions it as the "brightest spot in the global economy," he said, adding that other nations will be forced to engage with India with its unique strengths of size, market depth, innovation capacity, and talent pool.

The NITI Aayog CEO emphasised the need for sustained openness, consistency in policy and a strong emphasis on skilling to achieve developed-nation status.

“Even if other nations impose tariffs, India must stay a world-class, open economy,” he said.

Subrahmanyam emphasised policy priorities, labelling the National Manufacturing Mission as the “biggest announcement in the last budget.”

Subrahmanyam stated that foreign investors are increasingly drawn to India's market and cost competitiveness. However, he cautioned that reducing bureaucracy is essential to enhance the ease of doing business, reiterating the principle of "minimum government, maximum governance."

“If I had just one rupee to invest, I’d put it on skilling and education,” he said, emphasising the importance of human capital. He pointed out that Indian students average six to seven years of schooling, compared to 13 to 14 years in South Korea.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Finally some positive movement on trade talks! But I hope our negotiators don't compromise on key sectors like agriculture and digital services. We need to protect our domestic industries while opening up.
A
Aditya G
The focus on skilling is absolutely correct. I've seen so many engineering graduates struggling to find jobs because they lack practical skills. Hope the government actually implements these plans properly.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in the manufacturing sector, I'm cautiously optimistic. The 75 locations for manufacturing clusters need to be distributed properly across states, not just concentrated in a few regions.
M
Michael C
"Minimum government, maximum governance" - easier said than done. We've been hearing this for years but the bureaucracy remains a major hurdle for businesses. Hope this time there's real action.
K
Kavya N
The comparison with South Korea's education system is eye-opening. We really need to invest more in quality education, not just quantity. Hope the government takes this seriously! 📚

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