Trudeau announces two-way investment deal with India
Some of India’s biggest companies say they will invest more than $250 million in Canada in the coming years in everything from pulp mills to pharmaceuticals and the IT sector.
Canada, meanwhile, will invest $750 million in India.
The news came after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spent his third morning in India meeting six of the country’s most influential business tycoons, making deals that he says will create more than 5,800 new jobs in Canada.
“This was really a win- win morning, a win-win day for all of us and I’m excited for the opportunities in the Canada-india friendship,” Trudeau said during an armchair conversation with Chanda Kochhar, CEO of the Industrial Credit and Investment Corp. of India, in front of 550 Indian business people.
Trudeau initially said the entire $1 billion was money coming into Canada but his officials later corrected that it was a two-way trade number, with one-quarter coming from India into Canada, and the rest going the other way.
More than half the $750-mil- Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Sophie Gregoire Trudeau and children Xavier, 10, Ella-grace, 9, meet Indian movie star Shah Rukh Khan in Mumbai, India.
lion Canadian investment in India comes from Toronto’s Brookfield Asset Management, which is spending $480 million to buy a 1.25- million- square- foot office complex in Mumbai.
Another $200 million comes from Fairfax India Holdings Corp. of Canada, which acquired a 51 per cent stake in the Catholic Syrian Bank in Kerala, India.
The government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made a number of economic reforms in the last few years that have helped open the Indian economy to international investment opportunities. Kochhar said
these “huge” structural reforms - including a new goods and services tax to simply the tax system, a bankruptcy court and more trans- parency — have had a big impact on making it easier to do business in India.
The investments from India include a new operation in Canada from telecom equipment manufacturer Valiant Communications, a Canadian manufacturing facility to produce natural health products by Clarion Pharmaceutical and an Ontario operation for Vision Controls, which works on automation.
As well, Jubilant Life Sciences will spend $100 million to expand its existing facility in Kirkland, Que., which manufactures medical devices.
Later this week, digital transformation company Tech Mahindra, will announce a new partnership with Canada’s superclusters initiative.