Businessmen from India and China today signed memorandum of understanding (MoUs) worth USD 2.4 billion (about Rs 14,800 crore), which includes projects like USD 1.5-billion India International Trade Centre in Gujarat.
A 100-member strong business delegation from China, including Alibaba's billionaire founder Jack Ma, exchanged ideas with their Indian counterparts on how the two countries could further widen and deepen their economic engagement.
The meeting was organised by industry body FICCI in partnership with Zhejiang Federation of Industry and Commerce and support of the Embassy of the People's Republic of China.
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By collaborating on the two sectors, there was a scope for advanced manufacturing and the two nations could penetrate the world market with the unique mix, Secretary in the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP), Amitabh Kant, said.
At present, India faces a trade deficit, which is an unsustainable situation and cannot continue for long. With an open up business environment, Chinese companies should invest and set up businesses in India to bridge the trade deficit, Kant said.
Alibaba Executive Chairman Jack Ma, who captured world stage with the record-breaking USD 25 billion IPO of the e-commerce powerhouse at NYSE, said Indo-China business cooperation had a lot of potential.
FICCI President Sidharth Birla said: "We are happy that China has acknowledged that trade deficit is a matter of concern to us; our five year trade and economic cooperation pact is geared to addressing this."
He informed that on the sidelines of President Xi Jinping's visit, FICCI had organised an India-China Business Meeting with the support of Ministries of Commerce on both sides and Chinese companies signed buying orders for about USD 740 million.
A notable development was the agreements for setting up of Chinese industrial parks in India. Two agreements worth nearly USD 7 billion were signed for Gujarat and Maharashtra.