"I believe the visit will yield a win-win formula for both countries. I am very optimistic that it will go very well when Prime Minister comes here," Mukesh Aghi, president of US India Business Council (USIBC) told PTI.
Under the umbrella of US Chambers of Commerce, USIBC is the largest representative body of top American businesses having a footprint in India.
The bilateral talks appear to be no bed of roses as they come amidst thorny issues like US' plans to reduce the number of H-1B visa slots that are mainly used by Indian IT workers, and its withdrawal from the historic climate accord.
Closely involved in the preparations for Modi's US visit from June 25 as an industry representative, Aghi said the H-1B visa programme is unlikely to be a major issue of discussion between the two leaders.
"I believe this (H-1B) will not be an issue which will cause any kind of strain in discussion. The US industry needs technical resources to become more efficient, more competitive. And at the same time, I think have a good supply from India," he said, adding that H1B visa issue is not just a US issue, it is an issue for the US business community.
"It is a supply and demand issue. And, the industry needs more technical resources and the supply is constrained there," he said.
Trump had made the alleged abuse and fraud in H-1B visa system a major election issue during his campaign.
Aghi said India-US ties is the most important strategic issue at this stage.
"I think all sides realise value of this partnership and both sides are working to make this deeper and much further than where it is now," he said.
Of the firm belief that the Indian economy will grow at a faster pace at least for the next 20 years, the USIBC president said this would create tremendous market opportunity for US companies.
"To gain market share, if you look at Uber or Amazon or Facebook or WhatsApp, their market dominance in India is growing, and it affects their stock up to the Chinese market also," he said.
"I believe they're complementary, because I see India buys more and more defence, which in turn creates more jobs. Indian airlines place more order by US manufacture of planes, place more jobs here," he argued.
"If you move a lot of these manufacturing to India, it still creates more jobs. It is a complementary relationship. So I think my perspective of this is, it needs more long-term capital investment for the infrastructure. And, there is a lot of cash, it's not earning that high interest of return, so India provides the opportunities, especially for large pension funds," he said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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