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Obama India Trip: President Announces $10 Billion In Trade Deals Supporting 50,000 U.S. Jobs

BEN FELLER   11/ 7/10 12:27 AM ET   AP

Obama

MUMBAI, India — Searching for help half a world away, President Barack Obama on Saturday embraced India as the next jobs-creating giant for hurting Americans, not a cheap-labor rival that outsources opportunity from the United States.

Fresh off a political trouncing at home, Obama was determined to show tangible, economic results on his long Asia trip, and that was apparent from almost the moment he set foot on a steamy afternoon in the world's largest democracy. By the end of the first of his three days in India, he was promoting $10 billion in trade deals – completed in time for his visit – that the White House says will create about 54,000 jobs at home.

That's a modest gain compared with the extent of the enduring jobless crisis in the United States. Economists say it would require on the level of 300,000 new jobs a month to put a real dent in an unemployment rate stuck near 10 percent.

Yet to Obama, the bigger picture was the lucrative potential of an unleashed trading relationship between India and the United States. He seemed comfortable and energized away from Washington, days removed from the GOP's election thumping.

"For America, this is a jobs strategy," Obama said of his emphasis on trade, although it could stand as a motto for his 10-day trip. He is spending Sunday with young people in Mumbai and then heading onto meetings in New Delhi, the capital, before shifting later in the week ahead to Indonesia and economic talks in South Korea and Japan,

In India for the first time, Obama quickly got a sense of riches and poverty, history and tragedy.

His helicopter ride into this bustling financial center took in some of the country's slums. His luxury accommodation for the night, the Taj Mahal hotel, was one of the sites of a terrorist rampage in Mumbai that killed 166 people. Obama and his wife, Michelle, paid quiet tribute to the 31 people slain at the hotel, looking over their names inscribed in a memorial before meeting with victims' families and survivors of the shootings.

"We visit here to send a very clear message that in our determination to give our people a future of security and prosperity, the United States and India stand united," Obama said from an outdoor plaza, the soaring Gateway of India and the Arabian Sea behind him. "We'll never forget."

Indian commentators seized on the president's failure to mention Pakistan, India's neighbor and bitter rival. Pakistan was home to the 10 assailants.

The president also celebrated the life of a personal hero, Mohandas K. Gandhi, a father of Indian independence and model of peaceful activism. The Obamas spent time at the home-turned-museum where Gandhi once lived. They signed personal messages into the guest book and pledged to bring their daughters, Sasha and Malia, back one day.

Obama directly addressed the belief in the U.S. that India is robbing Americans of jobs. He acknowledged that many Americans only know trade and global commerce as the source of a job shipped overseas.

"There still exists a caricature of India as a land of call centers and back offices that cost American jobs. That's a real perception," Obama said. He noted the real concern in India that American corporate giants, if welcomed, would run mom-and-pop stories out of business and upend Indian culture.

Seeking to dismiss all "old stereotypes," Obama said the relationship between the countries is "creating jobs, growth, and higher living standards in both our countries. And that is the truth."

In the fallout of the U.S. elections, in which Democrats lost control of the House and Obama's ability to connect with his country was called into doubt, the president said one lesson learned was the need to set a better tone with business leaders. He was effusive on that front in Mumbai, gathering with top U.S. executives and studying up on their commerce with India.

"Just around this table you're seeing billions of dollars in orders from U.S. companies, tens of thousands of jobs being supported," he said. "We're a potential that has barely been scratched."

The White House arranged for four American chief executives who are in India for the occasion to brief reporters traveling with the president. They played up the importance of India as a trading partner and praised Obama's decision to come to the country to underscore that point in person.

Progress will take much more than public understanding. India's infrastructure remains an impediment to progress. And Obama's challenged India on the sore spot of shrinking its own barriers to trade and foreign investment. But his larger message was one of the united values and missions of the two largest democracies in the world.

Making that point, Obama even generated some laughter at his own expense, offering a reminder of the troubles at home.

"Our countries are blessed with the most effective form of government the world has ever known: democracy," he said. "Even if it can be slow at times. Even if it can be messy. Even if, sometimes, the election doesn't turn out as you'd like."

Onkar Kanwar, chairman of India's largest tire manufacturer, Apollo Tyres, said he appreciated the symbolism of Obama's coming to India during his first term and choosing to visit Mumbai first.

"Ties are getting closer and closer, which needs to be done. ... This demonstrates his commitment to another large democracy where he sees a lot of synergies," Kanwar said. "He's done all right."

___

Associated Press writers Ravi Nessman in New Delhi and Erica Werner and Erika Kinetz in Mumbai contributed to this report.

(This version CORRECTS source of quote at end to Kanwar, not Tyres.)

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MUMBAI, India — Searching for help half a world away, President Barack Obama on Saturday embraced India as the next jobs-creating giant for hurting Americans, not a cheap-labor rival that outsou...
MUMBAI, India — Searching for help half a world away, President Barack Obama on Saturday embraced India as the next jobs-creating giant for hurting Americans, not a cheap-labor rival that outsou...
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07:21 PM on 11/15/2010
200k per job? How long do these jobs last? Like the ones at Caterpillar? a few months. Now if they were government jobs it would have to cost 500k per job with the high salaries and benefits to do exactly what? well at 500k a gov. job would last about 18 months.
I haven't seen any great increase in government services after all the hiring that's gone on already, certainly not in relation to the amount of hiring that has been done. But they'll vote to keep those jobs! That's the idea right?
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dbmetzger
09:48 PM on 11/09/2010
and from Colbert...
President Obama's Expensive Trip to India
Barack Obama doesn't have to spend $200 million a day on a trip to India when he can use Cisco's new TelePresence system http://www.newslook.com/videos/264811-president-obama-s-expensive-trip-to-india?autoplay=true
12:11 PM on 11/09/2010
We ask India to buy goods from us to create 50K or so jobs but our financial institutions continue to export jobs to India, as has always been the case the past 10 years or so...

pathetic...
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muck-raker
give me liberty or give me death
08:11 AM on 11/08/2010
Oh the Double Standard: Silence is often more eloquent than loud clamor, so let us attend to what is unspoken.

Amid the furor over Iranian duplicity, the IAEA passed a resolution calling on Israel to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and open its nuclear facilities to inspection.

The United States and Europe tried to block the IAEA resolution, but it passed anyway. The media virtually ignored the event.

The United States assured Israel that it would support Israel's rejection of the resolution -- reaffirming a secret understanding that has allowed Israel to maintain a nuclear arsenal closed to international inspections, according to officials familiar with the arrangements. Again, the media were silent.

Indian officials greeted U.N. Resolution 1887 by announcing that India "can now build nuclear weapons with the same destructive power as those in the arsenals of the world's major nuclear powers," the Financial Times reported.

Both India and Pakistan are expanding their nuclear weapons programs. They have twice come dangerously close to nuclear war, and the problems that almost ignited this catastrophe are very much alive.

Obama greeted Resolution 1887 differently. The day before he was awarded the Nobel Prize for his inspiring commitment to peace, the Pentagon announced it was accelerating delivery of the most lethal non-nuclear weapons in the arsenal: 13-ton bombs for B-2 and B-52 stealth bombers, designed to destroy deeply hidden bunkers shielded by 10,000 pounds of reinforced concrete
DoesItMatter
empty micro bio
11:50 AM on 11/08/2010
First let countries like America and Russia reduce their stockpile to 0, then they can preach about horrors of war and nuclear wars to others.
09:47 PM on 11/07/2010
Seeking to dismiss all "old stereotypes," Obama said the relationship between the countries is "creating jobs, growth, and higher living standards in both our countries. And that is the truth."

Is he freakin kidding?
As the US corporations move more and more jobs offshore, the income levels in India have increased 14%.These jobs are not coming back and are not just manufacturing jobs. Decent paying jobs being offshored include accounting, customer support, health care administration and of course, IT related.
Per capita income in India is expected to grow by 14.4 per cent during fiscal 2009, the highest growth rate recorded in a single year in the last decade.
Check out the department of labor website to find all the companies still offshoring. http://www.doleta.gov/tradeact/taa/taa_search_form.cfm - you can search by state, company, by time frame etc. It’s mind boggling – there’s thousands of companies.
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ruhaba
09:30 PM on 11/07/2010
This should be in front page.
Tinsdale
"Character is Destiny."- Heraclitus
01:22 PM on 11/07/2010
The President's trip to India is an acknowledgement of India as a rising world power.

We are witnessing the deepening twilight of the "American Century" and the rising influence of China and India in a new era of economic dominance.
11:39 PM on 11/07/2010
Open your mouth when both India and China's GDP comes even close to that of the US's.

Of course those nations are rising economically. When you live in the dark and are brought to the light by the West, you will rise quickly. Now, the US, Japan, Brazil, India, and China need to figure out how to interlock themselves even closer economically.
DoesItMatter
empty micro bio
11:51 AM on 11/08/2010
Once upon a time the West lived in the dark. Let us not forget the history.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
01:04 PM on 11/07/2010
Are there any details on how the trade agreements are going to create and sustain over 50,000 American jobs?
All that I've read is that the deals included a 7.7 billion dollar contract for Boeing to supply 30 of its 737 aircraft to Spice Airlines, and a preliminary accord on the sale of 10 C-17 Globemaster military transport aircraft potentially worth four billion dollars. 40 aircraft in total.
01:27 PM on 11/07/2010
they (U.S) is going to lift many trade restrictions that they imposed on us after 1998 nuclear test. many top indian CEO were allways groaning about this for years.so finally they will be import stuff that they wanted and hopefully US export to India will go up, hence more jobs.
and we got china breathing down our neck. we have to try to keep up with them. just 30-40 aircrafts are not going to cut it. so there will be more deals to come .
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
01:02 PM on 11/07/2010
I read an account of the trade mission aspect of this trip and of the American executives who make up the mission. It is dominated by the defense industries, and so I wonder if the US is bolstering up India to take part in a war against Pakistan with the US or to attack Pakistan on its own. Sadly, the only US export these days is war.
02:02 PM on 11/07/2010
indian army is already 3 time bigger than the Pakistani army, thanks to Russians. so no need of concern there. but china is a cause for concern. we have to keep up with it but have serious supplies shortage.this is where we look to America.for those military civilian equipment of sensitive nature.we dont wanna wage war on anybody but we dont wanna be caught napping.
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12:29 PM on 11/07/2010
I bet india will be paid in T bonds lmao ... what a rip off...
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Weirdwriter
03:06 PM on 11/07/2010
You don't even know enough to place a bet.
09:01 AM on 11/07/2010
India will be our enemy in 15 years and they will have a superior military because of their superior economy.

...and U.S. executives will have done this ONE JOB AT A TIME!
11:12 AM on 11/07/2010
How many overseas bases India has and how many countries they have invaded in the last 50 years ??
Just because US engages in wars all around the world doesn't mean other countries are interested in doing the same thing.

they got bigger worries like providing jobs for their population.
DoesItMatter
empty micro bio
11:41 AM on 11/07/2010
Why would India be enemy of USA? This is in spite of USA helping and sustaining Pakistan for decades.
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
01:05 PM on 11/07/2010
The US and Pakistan no longer have a good relationship, but I agree with you that India will not become an enemy of the US. They have enemies closer to home, and the US would like to see the same countries destabilized by war.
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profco
Freedom- just another word for nothin left to lose
08:32 AM on 11/07/2010
I just watched the movie Slumdog Millionnaire last night for the first time. (We had TIVO'd it several weeks ago.) I found myself wondering how the term "democracy" can be applied to a country where the economic discrepancy is so vast between the very few (but growing number) of rich and super-rich, who are the beneficiaries of the new Indian economy, and the huge numbers of very poor, stuck in the slums and struggling to stay alive each day, and who are supposed to benefit from the gravitational trickle-down of crumbs from the creation of wealth for the very few.

We may find out all too soon, as astro-turf Tea Party candidates, funded by billionnaires, begins to enact its "populist" agenda, such as repealing the minimum wage, gutting health care reform, eviscerating safety standards for workers, eliminating environmental protection regulations, shipping jobs to India and China where extending income inequality will benefit relatively few new entrants to the middle class while doing nothing for the inexhaustible number of poor, and making it inevitable that once-middle class towns and neighborhoods degenerate into slums.

How long before we meet India on the ladder of economic success in terms of GDP (and other such statistics that ignore income distribution in their per-capita data), with the U.S. going down, India coming up, with growing numbers of the non-rich on all rungs, trying to desperately to hang on?
01:52 PM on 11/07/2010
Word of advice: Slumdog Millionaire is fiction. Not the best place to get your info on india....
06:31 AM on 11/07/2010
Per the Hindustan Times in India- " It will be a 20-minute speech at Parliament House's Central Hall that has been witness to some historic events, including first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru's "tryst with destiny" speech when India became independent.

Obama will make history for more than one reason during the Nov 6-9 visit. This will be the first time a teleprompter will be used in the nearly 100-feet high dome-shaped hall that has portraits of eminent national leaders adorning its walls.

Indian politicians are known for making impromptu long speeches and perhaps that is why some parliament officials, who did not wish to be named, sounded rather surprised with the idea of a teleprompter for Obama.

"We thought Obama is a trained orator and skilled in the art of mass address with his continuous eye contact," an official, who did not wish to be identified because of security restrictions, said.

Obama is known to captivate audiences with his one-liners that sound like extempore and his deep gaze. But few in India know that the US president always carries the teleprompter with him wherever he speaks. "
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Ajita Kamal
I'm a fluzlbuwlzum saint.
07:50 AM on 11/07/2010
2008 Primary debates.
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FloridaLAW
This Day, This Moment, Right Now!
03:44 AM on 11/07/2010
I'd like to know in what industry does this 50 billion dollar deal come from.
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AZreb
equal-opportunity Independent heathen
07:52 AM on 11/07/2010
Boeing and GE are two of the major players - you know, the "small" corporations that already get support and contracts from our own government and many of the contracts should be going to the actual small businesses. And I wouldn't doubt that the contracts received from India are for military equipment - after all, that is our major industry.
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Kingkongmama
07:55 AM on 11/07/2010
they are selling boeing 737s to some air travel corporations and GE is selling jet engines to the indian air force. Most of these were in the pipeline for many years and this is just finalizing those. No new deals were signed on this particular visit.