PILOT ISSUE
   
   
  INSIDE THIS ISSUE
   
   
   
  01 MAIN
   
   
  02 TRADE & ECONOMY
   
   
  03 INVESTMENT UPDATE
   
   
  04 POLICY UPDATE
   
   
  05 INFOTECH
   
   
  06 CULTURE
   
   
  07 TRAVEL
   
   
  08 CALENDAR
   

   
  HIGHLIGHTS
   
  Foreign trade policy targets $92-bn exports
MORE [+]
 
  Know India Better: An Introduction to Indian Music
MORE [+]
 
  Kerala:
A Cultural Melting Pot

MORE [+]
 

     
 
     
  Commerce and Industry Minister's visit to Australia will Boost India-Australia Economic and Trade Relations  
   
    Shri Kamal Nath, Commerce and Industry Minister, visited Australia from 16 to 20 May, 2005 for the India-Australia Joint Ministerial Commission, leading a large business delegation.
In Perth, Shri Kamal Nath met the Premier of Western Australia, Mr. Geoff Gallop, and discussed issues related to growing ties between India and Australia, and Western Australia’s significant role in economic ties between the two countries.


In Sydney, Shri Kamal Nath addressed the Australian CEOs and spoke on business opportunities in India. Later he, along with the Australian Minister for Communication and Information Technology, inaugurated the India-Australia Joint Business Council meeting. The Joint Commission meeting was held in Sydney on 19 May in the afternoon, co-chaired by Shri Kamal Nath and Mr.Mark Vaile, the Australian Minister for ForeignTrade.
           
  The Joint Commission agreed to begin official level talks for developing a Trade and Economic Framework, which will anchor the further expansion of economic and commercial ties.

Mr.Mark Vaile, commenting on the Agreement, said that India is set to become one of Australia’s key regional partners. He added that India is Australia’s fastest growing merchandise export market over the past 5 years.
  Shri Kamal Nath also met Premier Bob Carr and discussed ways of further activating economic ties between India and New South Wales.

In Melbourne, Shri Kamal Nath met Mr.Steve Bracks, Premier of Victoria and discussed increasing cooperation between the companies based in Victoria and India. Victoria is planning to open a Trade Office in Bangalore.
  Shri Kamal Nath also addressed a well-attended business lunch hosted by the Australia-India Business Council. Minister Marsha Thompson of the Victorian Government was also present and addressed the gathering.

Shri Kamal Nath also addressed a breakfast meeting at the Lowy Institute in Sydney. He also had detailed interaction with the Global Foundation in Sydney and Melbourne.
     
   
     
  A Letter from the High Commissioner  

       
    Since my arrival in Australia about a year ago, I have been struck by the positive and growing interest in India among policy-makers, the media and business here. It has been my effort to feed that interest. In particular, I have tried to address the companion perception that India is far away and a difficult place to do business in.

In fact, it is neither. It is closer than the traditional economic partners of Australia in Europe and America; it is also no further than the North Asian partners that have been so actively engaged by Australia in recent years.
           
  As to difficulty, a recent study by A.T. Kearney placed India third - behind China and the US - among the most attractive investment destinations in the world.

The Kearney study was focussed on foreign investment. Even in a domestic context, it is striking that India saw the second highest number of business start-ups in 2003, after the US.

There is good news coming out of India but I always emphasise the qualitative changes taking place too. The most important is the increasing role of a genuine private sector in India in the last 15 or 20 years. We have been able to move away from the "socialistic pattern of society" proclaimed in our Industrial Policy Resolution in 1956. This has been built on the foundations of the strong historical tradition of private enterprise in the country. Whether we talk of energy or automobiles, or
telecommunication, there is an entrepreneurial class that is ready to fill in the space as the state retreats from economic activity.
  Another important feature of the Indian economy is the fact that our growth is still largely driven by domestic demand. We have not followed the East and South-East Asian model of largely export-led growth. This makes India a good bet for a counter-cyclical strategy. We have a growing middle-class of some 400million, all woven together in one national market. We are also gradually opening up the retail sector, valued at about US$150billion and growing at 25-30 percent every year.

This economic churning in India is matched by a similar re-arrangement in the political and cultural spheres. The spread of education and wealth has enabled the best of us to go global, and our cuisine and Bollywood are making a space for themselves in virtually every continent. The vibrancy of our media and the frenetic political activity back home are all a reflection of this changing India.

Our hope is to project a little of this to the readers of this newsletter.
  We hope that the readers will see that there is a historic process under way, and seek to participate in it. We have a busy bilateral schedule of activities in the coming year. Our Joint Economic Commission met in the third week of April in Australia. Commerce & Industry Minister, Kamal Nath, spent a week in Australia, covering Perth, Sydney and Melbourne. We look forward to welcoming Foreign Minister Downer a little later. And then we plan on the big ones - exchange of visits at the level of Head of State and Government.

It promises to be the start of a dynamic new relationship, one filled with new content. It will bring together two well-established democracies in the Asia-Pacific region closer together and help foster greater prosperity and stability in the continent.

Oh, and we shan't forget the cricket either.


 
 
   

India –Australia Ties in History and Now

  India - Australia have shared traditional ties dating back to the 18th century. The relations can be traced back to late 18th Century and early 19th Century with shipments of coal from Sydney to Calcutta. This was followed by export of horses from New South Wales. Later, more diversified trade ties developed between the two countries.

Full diplomatic relations between our two countries are much more recent but still date back to more than 50 years. The pre-cursor of Consulate-General of India first opened in Sydney as the Trade Office in 1941. The first Indian High Commissioner reached Canberra in 1946. India and Australia share much in common. Both countries are members of the Commonwealth, have similar institutions of parliamentary democracy, legal, financial and government institutions, free and vibrant press, speak the same language and are Indian Ocean littoral States. We are active members of the Indian Ocean Rim - Association for Regional Cooperation, ASEAN Regional Forum and dialogue partners with ASEAN.

The bilateral relationship continued to develop over the years. Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi visited Australia in 1986.
A return visit was paid by Prime Minister Hawke in 1989. Relations developed steadily, through the 1990's, until the nuclear tests by India in 1998. However, after a brief dip, bilateral exchanges resumed, and became more active from 2000 onwards, following Prime Minister John Howard's visit in July that year. The visit of an Australian Prime Minister opened a new phase in bilateral relations. This visit was followed by a series of Minister-level visits and substantive discussions between the two Governments.

The most recent was the visit of Mr. Yashwant Sinha, former External Affairs Minister in August 2003 for the Foreign Ministers' Framework Dialogue. In 2004, Premier of Queensland, Mr. Peter Beattie; Premier of NSW, Mr. Bob Carr; and Premier of South Australia, Mr. Mike Rann, visited India. Considering the interaction in the past two and a half years bilateral relations between our two countries are poised to be raised to a new level. India and Australia have committed themselves to a co-ordinated international approach in overcoming the challenges posed by terrorism. We have similar approaches to many of the other pressing issues of our times.

India-Australia cooperation has made rapid strides in many areas. There are also official agreements and institutionalised mechanisms to promote bilateral cooperation such as Avoidance of Double Taxation Agreement, Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement, an MOU for Cooperation in IT, an MOU on Tourism and an MOU on Cultural Heritage Cooperation. India and Australia signed an MOU on Counter-terrorism in August 2003 and an MOU on Science & Technology in October 2003. A new Air Services Agreement was initialled in September 2004 in New Delhi. This year a VVIP visit is expected to India from Australia.