US Calls For More Investment-Friendly India

International Business Times

Published Apr 16, 2014 10:01PM ET

Updated Apr 16, 2014 10:15PM ET

US Calls For More Investment-Friendly India

By Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States on Wednesday urged the Indian government that emerges from ongoing elections to follow economic policies that encourage investment, saying Washington would like to see bilateral trade grow to $500 billion a year.              

Nisha Biswal, U.S. assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, said future economic growth in South Asia hinged on India as the region's growth engine.              

However, Biswal said that while Indian leaders had targeted $1 trillion in infrastructure investment over five years to close gaps preventing growth in manufacturing, policies still inhibited foreign investment. She said India ranked a poor 134 out of 189 countries as a place to invest and start a business.              

"India, the world's largest democracy, must decide its own path to the future," Biswal said in a speech at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.

"Will it make the reforms necessary to attract investment? Will it capitalize on the opportunities that lie in front of it?              

"Those are the questions that India's voters are asking as they cast their ballots and those are the questions that we want to see answered," she said.              

Growth in Asia's third-largest economy, has almost halved to below 5 percent in the past two years on weak investment and consumer demand, the worst slowdown since the 1980s.              

Polls show the nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the main opposition party, is on course to win most seats in the election that began on April 7.