"We're engaging directly with India, as it makes some fundamental choices about its own economic future," Biden said ahead of his India trip, which is the first by an American Vice President in more than half-a-century.
Biden is scheduled to leave for India and Singapore tomorrow.
"Just this week India announced that it will relax caps on foreign direct investment in certain sectors. We still have a lot of work to do on a wide range of issues, including the civil-nuclear cooperation, bilateral investment treaty, policies protecting innovation," Biden said.
"In the last 13 years we've increased five-fold our bilateral trade, reaching nearly a hundred billion dollars. But if you look at it from a distance, an uninformed person, looking at it from a distance, there is no reason that if our countries make the right choices, trade cannot grow five-fold or more," he said.
"I'm traveling to India next week -- 20, even 10 years ago, some might have suggested that India be left out of the discussions about the Asia- Pacific.
"To us, that's welcome news. We encourage it. We welcome India's engagement in the region, and we welcome its efforts to develop new trade and transportation links by land and by sea in the area," he said.
Opening the doors to shore up foreign investments, India on Tuesday liberalised FDI limits in a dozen sectors, including allowing 100 per cent in telecom and higher limits in 'state-of-the-art' defence manufacturing, to boost the sagging economy.
