As many as 40 top US Senators led by Rob Portman and Robert Menedez wrote a letter to the Secretary of State John Kerry who would be co-chairing the India-US Strategic Dialogue in New Delhi on Monday, urging him to seek swift action from India on concerns of the American business communities regarding Indian trade policies.
Simultaneously 35 Congressmen members of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee in a letter to the US President Barack Obama, asked not only to raise the concerns of the American business, but also use the platform to map out a bilateral trade and investment engagement strategy by the US Trade Representatives and to schedule a Trade Policy Forum as soon as possible.
Coinciding with this another letter was written by 16 top American trade and business organizations to Obama last week.
"The (Obama) Administration must send a clear signal to India that it will not stand for unfair trade practices that threaten US business, jobs, and innovation.
"American manufacturers are second to none, and we must ensure that they are on a level playing field with their global competitors," Portman said.
The Senators urge the State Department "to press for swift action and make clear to your Indian counterparts that the United States will consider all trade tools at its disposal if India does not end its discriminatory practices,"
"India's deteriorating IP environment is bad for investment, bad for innovation, and bad for international trade," said Mark Elliot, executive vice president of the US Chamber of Commerce's Global Intellectual Property Center, co-chair of the Alliance for Fair Trade with India.
In their letter, members of the Ways and Means Committee urged Obama to address several pressing trade and investment issues at the upcoming Strategic Dialogue.
"This year's meetings provide a particularly timely opportunity to encourage India to pursue market-based policies and reforms instead of erecting barriers that hurt US exporters, investors, and workers as well as its own citizens," members of the Committee said.
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