Garavi Gujarat USA

‘Offset requiremen­ts major hurdle in defence trade’

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INDIA offers huge opportunit­ies for the US in bilateral defence trade but its offset requiremen­ts pose an enormous challenge in doing business with the country, a former top Pentagon official has told American lawmakers.

Ellen Lord, who previously served as the under secretary of defence for acquisitio­n and sustainmen­t, told members of the House Armed Services Committee on Wednesday that the US is in talks with India on several multi-billion key defence sales, including the Guardian drones.

‘India has enormous opportunit­ies but also enormous challenges. We have never been able to get the overarchin­g security agreements with India that we would hope,’ Lord said.

‘We have challenges with things like the S-400 (Russian anti-aircraft missile system being bought by India) being on contract and so forth. Additional­ly, the challenge of doing business, I can tell you in India is enormous because of offset requiremen­ts there to be able to provide a local business.’

Under India’s offset policy, foreign defence entities, for all contracts worth Rs 20 billion ($260 million) or more, are mandated to spend at least 30 per cent of the total contract value in India through procuremen­t of components, transfer of technologi­es or setting up of research and developmen­t activities.

Over the past decade, the volume of defence trade between the two countries has increased from almost zero to $18bn. Major American companies like Boeing, Lockheed Martin and General Atomics are eyeing the Indian market now, which is projected to grow exponentia­lly over the next decade.

‘So, enormous potential, but I would say the opportunit­y and the challenge is to work with the Indian government to streamline policies and procedures, make them consistent so that it is a pretty predictabl­e venue for US business and government to invest in,’ Lord said.

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