India's Indo-Pacific Economic Framework membership will strengthen
region - Yellen
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[November 11, 2022] By
David Lawder
NOIDA, India (Reuters) -India’s membership
in the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) will make supply chains
resilient between the Asian country and the United States and help the
entire region, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Friday.
Yellen said strong trade and investment, and people-to- people ties make
the bilateral economic and financial relationship a critical element to
the partnership between the two countries.
"India’s membership in Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, in efforts to
make our supply chains more resilient, through what I call
friend-shoring, are tightening those ties," Yellen said on her first
trip to India as U.S. Treasury Secretary.
While India is part of the Biden administration's signature Asian
engagement project IPEF, it has opted against joining the IPEF trade
pillar negotiations.
Earlier in the day, Yellen visited Microsoft research facility on the
outskirts of New Delhi, before addressing a joint news conference with
Indian Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
Sitharaman said the meeting between the two will facilitate a
coordinated policy stance on global economic challenges facing the
world.
"Meeting today we lend greater rigor to economic relationship,
strengthen businesses-to-business links, and facilitate coordinated
policy stance to address the pressing global economic challenges,"
Sitharaman said.
Sitharaman and Yellen will participate in a U.S.-India Economic and
Financial Partnership dialogue in New Delhi and will discuss India's
leadership agenda for the G20 group of major economies next year.
NATURAL ALLIES
Yellen, in remarks at the Microsoft facility, highlighted the Biden
administration's desire to deepen economic ties with India, saying that
both the global economy and the democratic idea were at inflection
points.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen
opens a water bottle during her interview with Reuters in New Delhi,
India, November 11, 2022. REUTERS/Altaf Hussain
Her remarks came as control of the U.S. Congress was still undecided
after midterm elections on Tuesday.
"The U.S. and India are 'natural allies,' in the words of a former
Indian prime minister," Yellen said, adding that both had waged
similar fights for independence to attain freedom and dignity.
"People around the world are looking to us and asking: can
democracies meet the economic needs of their citizens? Can they
stand up to bullies and cooperate on the most intractable global
problems?" she said.
As the two largest democracies, India and the United States could
answer the sceptics by taking action over the next year and beyond
that could "demonstrate the capacity of our democracies to deliver
for our people. I am confident that we will succeed."
Among these actions are goals for India's leadership of the G2,
which should focus on the shared priorities for boosting investment
to fight climate change, breaking a logjam in restructuring debts
for poorer countries and improving access to the digital economy.
"India's G20 year is a chance to accelerate global coordination on
debt restructuring," Yellen said.
She also said that ending the war in Ukraine was a "moral
imperative" but that economic challenges from the conflict and from
supply chain strains were drawing India and the United States closer
together.
The United States was working to strengthen India's "friend-shoring"
role as a trusted, reliable supplier, she said.
(Additional reporting by Aftab Ahmed in New Delhi; Editing by
Bradley Perrett)
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