United States presses for Bilateral Investment Treaty with India

An Indo-US  Trade group has proposed and is pressing hard for  US-India Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT), which would take the trade between two countries to new heights.
“A US-India Bilateral Investment Treaty is truly the ‘next hill to climb’ in the strategic partnership,” said Ron Somers, president of the US-India Business Council (USIBC) comprising over 300 top US and a score Indian companies, Monday.

USIBC’s Coalition for Jobs and Growth will serve as the organizing body to provide input to US negotiators and to promote support and understanding of the importance of a US India BIT and its ultimate ratification by the US Senate, the group said.

Co-Chaired by Susan G. Esserman, a USIBC board member, former Deputy US Trade Representative and currently partner at Steptoe & Johnson, the coalition will continue the work begun by USIBC’s Trade and Investment Initiative in 2007.

USIBC was then the first advocate for a bilateral investment treaty, eventually succeeding in placing the BIT on the bilateral agenda when the two countries announced BIT negotiations in 2008, it said in a release.

The coalition announced at a USIBC briefing with US BIT negotiators, will leverage the collective strength of industry, academic experts and the Indian American community to make sure this critical agreement is completed and ratified.

“The BIT will engender greater cooperation and collaboration, protect and promote foreign investment and ultimately lead to economic growth and job creation in both countries,” Somers said.

“USIBC, through the Coalition for Jobs and Growth, is committed to informing negotiations and pushing forward on eventual ratification of a robust treaty,” he said.